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                  <text>Reaga·n will confer with· Carter, leaders
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WINTHROP

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b Dick Cavalli

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1..00 ANGELES ( ,\P )- Ronald Reagan, ~ed with a
detailed strategy he says ~an make hill prori$ed tax
and spe11ding cuts a reality, prepared tOday to fly to.
W!IShington for the first time since b!!ing elected
president twQ weeks ago. ·
In five days in Washington, he will meet with the
man he defeated, Jimmy Carter; with congressional
leaders of both parties; and with the transition staff he
picked to help guide the \ransfer of power.
He is due to arrive in Washington in the early
evening, fly by helieopter to a goverrunent guest house
and, 30 minutes later, address by phone the nation's
Republican governors, meeting in Philadelphia.
· On Sunday, Reagan and fonner Treasury Secretary
George P. Shultz, chainnan of a committee of 14
prominent Republcan economillts who drafted the
detailed spending and tax cut plan, met reporters.
But neither would describe SJli!Cif(cs from the
proposal except to confirm that It is a detailed plan to
'implement Reagan's campaign promises to cut government spending by 2 percent annually and federal in- .
come taxes across the board 10 percent for the next
threeyean.
.
·

After a 4f&gt;.minute session with the economic advisers, Reagan told reporters: " It's all there in the
paperback, some light weekend reading,'' He carried
two large black, three-ring hinders, which he said contained sununaries of the recommendations.
"We're going to do what I said throughout the campaign we would do. These are plans for implemention,
reducing the cost of government, reducing the burden
on the people ·and getting a prosperity that would be
shared by all," Reagan added.
Shultz said the report could reshape government and .
revitalize the economy.
"strong and a~isive things can be done," Shultz
said, adding that a top priority is controlling government spending:
He had harsh words about the 'present state of the
economy: ·
"If we have had a recovery at all, it is a very fragile
. one," Shultz said. "The situation the governor will
inherit is very gloomy. The rate of inflation is very
high. The budget is hemorrhaging. It is a very bad

scene."
Asked if the planned budget cuts would reduce gover-

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Off.

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nment services for the poor, Reagan replied indirectly
that the plan was not designed to "deprive
people ...,We're still talking in the areas of extravagance" to find budget cuts.
Shultz said his panel, which includes three former
directors of the federal Office of Management and
Budget, did not attempt to produce new economic
proposals.
Instead, he said, the panel's report is designed to he
"a workable ...comprehensive and coordinated
strategy" to meet Reagan's tax and spending cut
goals, control inflation and balance the budget.
Shultz would not say what the timetable for balancing the federal budget.would be. He said he personaly
believes that it is "doubtful " the budget can be balanced by 1982 but that a balaced budget is "possible" by
1983.
Reagan has promised a balanced budget by 1983 and
said he thinks it can be done earlier.
The president~lect's Washington schedule includes
five meetings with Senate and House leaders, two
national security briefings, a Thursday afternoon visit
with Carter in the White House and several meetings

with political supporters and aides. No news conferences or speeches, other than tonight's telephone
hook-up , are on tap, however.
Reagan is scheduled to return to California for the
wt;ekend and plans to go his Santa Barbara ranch,
where he vacationed last week, for another five-day
vacation over Thanksgiving.
While Reagan's session with reporters was hill only
public appearance of the weekend, he had a steady
stream of visitors at his Pacific Palsades home, including aides, trustees of his personal portfolio of investments and two Texas political figures, Gov.
William Cl.ements and former governor and treasury
secretary John Connally.
Connally, who had lunch with Reagan on Saturday,
and Clements, who had Sunday breakfast with him,
refused to talk with reporters after their meetings,
saying they had to rush to catch airplane flights.
Reagan aides said Connally and Clements were
asked for advice on issues f;1cing the new administration and Reagan has not yet started interviewing prospective job appointees.

•

·at

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1~80 ,

VOL. XXI NO. 152

FIFTEEN CENTS

Hamilton
teachers
on strike
tl """"·

Priscilla's Po
WHAT DID I
TELL YOU,
!:30TTS--·

Ed Sullivan
roESN
IT BEAT
RUNNING ~ND THE
a.oc:K ALL TliE liME ?

"'CRISP
AUTUMN
AIR"'

,.. THE 50UND OF A CRYSTAL
BROOK, THE CRUNCH OF

WINNERS - Winners of the Southeast Ohio Junior
Miss Pageant for Meigs and Vinton Counties held at the
Meigs Junior High School in Middleport Sunday were,

LEAVE'S UNDERFOOT"'

left to right, Boimie Boso, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Clair Boso, rtrst runner-up, Meigs County; Sonja Hill,
daughter of Sandra Hill and Dennie Hill, Meigs Coun-

ty's new Junior Miss; Marla George, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. James George, the new Vinton County Junior
Miss·, and Pebbles Blake, daughter of 'Mr. and Mrs.
Elden Blake, Jr., first runner-up .Vinton County. Emcee for the annual event.was Kim Taylor, Meigs Junior
Miss of 1978.

Will Reagan·get challenge?
WASHINGTON
(A~
President~lect Ronald Reagan
visits Congress this week and likely
will fi!ld members debating whether
to challenge him to make the federal
spending cuts promised in hill CI!JDpalgn:

Reagan, seeking to establish good
relations with Congress, will meet
with Democratic and Republican
leaders Tuesday, after -Dying to
Washington from California today.
' Both the House and the Senate are
scheduled to work this week on a binding federal budget for. the fiscal
year that began Oct.l.
·
The House version calls for spending $1131.7 billion, leaving a deficit
of $25 billion. To reach that figure,
Reailan would have to cut planned
expenditures $17 billion, roughly the
2 percent by which he has said the
budget could be pnmed.

The Senate version proposes spen-.
ding of $633 billion, with a deficit of
$17.9 billion, but does not mandate a
spending cut.
The House version is sponsored by
Rep. Robert Giaimo, [).Conn., the
Budget Committee chairman. He
said it would enable Reagan to make
good on claims that 2 percent could
be trimmed by eliminating waste
and fraud.
But Senate Republican Leader
HoWard Baker has accused Gillimo
of "playing political games with us''
and has said Reagan should be given
"a falr shot" at making spending
cuts after be takes office.
In other matters on Capitol Hill
thisweek:
·
-The Senate is exjlected to consider a three-year extension or a
. multibillion-dollar revenuHharing
program for cities and counties. Its

.

supporters say the aid is vital to continuing a variety of basic services.
The House passed its version last
week.
"
- Also on the Senate agenda are
bills appropriating $9.57 billion for
the State, Justice and Commerce
departments and related agencies
and $10.57 billion for the Interior
•
Department.
The Justice department measure
has been delayed by arguments over
an amendment that would block the
department from spending money in
attempts to require busing of school
children to achieve racial balance.
Baker said he expects the bill to be
passed with the _amendment, but
conceded it might be :vetoed by Carter. In that event, Congreas could
pass a resolution to continue current
spending levels in the affected
departments for the time being.

By The Associated Press
. Public school teachers in
Hamilton walked picket lines outside city schools this morning and
urged parents to keep their children
home. Strikes dragged on in Ravenna and New Albany.
School administrators said ~lasses
would be held in the 10;500-pupil
Hamilton district. Bus driv~rs
refused to honor the teachers'
pickets, but no incidents were reported.
The executive committee of the
Hamilton Classroom Teache.rs
Association called the strike Sunday
night after the school board failed to
meet a a 6 p.m. deadline set by the
committee for a new contract offer.
Later, the decision was overwhelmingly endorsed at a meeting
attended by ahout 500 teachers.
Teachers rejected a 7 percent pay
raise offer l!l$t week,.V.():wing to stjck
by ari artll.m's decfo!np tbat they ,
deserved an 8 percent pay raise.
Teachers authorized the strike ln
voting Sept 1~.
In Ravenna, a strike by .22()
teachers in the Ravenna school
district in Portage County began its
sixth day today. No negotiations
have been scheduled.
Strikers picketed the system's
niile buildings over the· weekend.
Issuesin the walkout include
salaries, staff ·reductions and
dismiSsal poUcy.

AMBASSADOR DIES
. BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) - The
Dominican ambassador to Colombia
was shot to death early today in the
apartment of a fellow Dominican
diplomat here, police said.
Pollee said Ambassador Eduardo
Antonlo'Garcla Vazque&gt;, 60,.was hit .
by seven bullets. at the home of
Domfuican Consul Rafae• Augusto
Sanchez.
The consul remained inside bts
apartment and his telephone was
disconnected. Colombian poUce said
they could not enter the consul's
bouse because he has diplomatic immunity.

Cwrter~sco~tion
WASHINGTON- Preside!)! Carter, after accepting condolences on
his election defeat, thanked the people of the First Baptist Church for

accepting the First Family' 'not as special people who live in the_j'hite
House but as neighbors."
A resolution by church members was read aloud Sunday in Bible
class before the worship service. It thanked the president for
belonging to the church and offered condolences "with love and
prayerful support."
"Thank you very much," Carter responded. " That means so much
tome."

Jackson eager to help Reagan
WASHINGTON- Sen. Henry Jackson, !).Wash., says he'~ eager to
help the Republican·administration of Ronald Reagan in any way he
can but so far has not been offered a job by the president-elect.
.
Shortly after hill election, Reagan named Jackson to a transition advisory team on foreign affairs and defense issues. There has been
SP\!Culation that he might be asked to join a Reagan cabinet as
secretary of state or secretary of defense.

Fires inflict heavy losses ·
1..00 ANGELES- Roaring fires moved on in front or the capricious
Santa AM winds today after Inflicting losses in the tens of millions of
dollars over 44,000 acres of parched brushland. More than 100 homes
were damaged or destroyed and at least one person died.
Some of the hillside homes were valued at more than $1 million.
Choking smoke and ash blown by the northeasterly winds, which
ranged up to 80 mph, blanketed areas several miles from the nine fires
that raged through the weekend.
While the fires spread, homeowners tried to salvage bits of their
charred homes. One old man wept in the anns of his pregnant
daughter as a forlorn dog sat near smoldering ruins in the posh Bradbury area.

Lockheed engineers go on strike
BuRBANK, Calif. - The 2,800 union workers who develop and
design aircraft for Lockheed California Co. were walking picket lines
today after rejecting a last-minute contract proposal, union officials
said.
The aircraft builder, headquartered here, was struck at midnight
Sunday by its engineers and designers .
The company, which employs 26,000 people, would continue to
operate normally, Lockheed spokesman Jim Ragsdale said Sunday.
Richard CappeUetti, president of the Engineers and Scientists
Guild, Lockheed section, said the ilnion and company "reached an impasse last night when the company ~ave us its final offer."

Weather forecast
I!Jws tonight in the mid-30s. Rain changing to snow Tuesday. Highs
in the mid to upper 30s. Chance of precipitation near 100 percent
tonight and 90 percent Tuesday. Northeasterly winds 1~25 mph
tonight.
Extended Ohio ForecastWednesday through Friday:Fair
Ulrough the period. Highs in the low to mid.o!Os. Lows in the mid-20s
Wednesday and in the low to mid-30s by Friday.

Iraqi forces .sink 10 gunboats
·. BAGID&gt;AD, Iraq (AP) - Iraqi
forces attacking Susangerd sank 10
Iranian gunboats in the Karkheh
River and destroyed 10 rocket·

''OOU It M'A IO'I'HIA YOU...
WHAT WE DO 1'0 PECIPI.f'S DIET8r

\

are trying to squeeze in a pincers
movement.
The Iraqi conunand said Its forces
ldlled 500 Iranians in house-to-house
fif!htin8 Sunday and the defenders
were "fleeing in panic." It said 30
revolutionary guards trying to
escape drowned in the Karkheh
River.
However, · Iran's official . Pars
news agency claimed the

launching bues, \he Baghdad command said today. Meanwhile,
Kuwait charged Iran with the
lleCQild ~et attack on Its border in
· five days.
. The Iraqi communique said in addition to sinking- the gunboats, its
forces destroyed eight Iranian anti- revoluttu.ry guarda in 8usangerd
tank miiiBlle laWIChenl and 21 ldlled 500 Iraqis and destroyed 51
mB!tary vehicles in Susangerd, and tanka. It IBid only 30 li the guards
that ''the enemy lOst a huge nmnber were ldJied.
Mohsen Relaie, a member of the
li IIOtdien.ldJied in the operations
revolutionai'y guards' central comSunday night and early Monday.''
Ollualty itijiOI Ia from the two mand, charged lhet the Iraqi troope
governments differed widely, but . "committed uglier crimea in
together they. conf'anned that a SuaBngerd than HlUer's in W9rld
major battle was Wider way for War D." Other Iranian officials ar · .
Saancent. II miles eul of the Iraqi cUlled the lraqil of rape and using
border and30 miles nortllwat of All. "chemiCal weapona" that ''spread
wu, the capital of Iran's oil-rich germs" and caused blisters, reports
IChlllillan Province that the Iraqis from Tehran said.

. The capture of Susangerd would
allow the Iraqis to bring presiiure on
Ahwaz from the north. The provincial capital has been Wider heavy artillery shelling for the past month
from forces to the S~~Uth, and its caP:
ture would open the way to an eastward advance to the ollfields. ·
Iraq reported its jet fighters made
more attacks Sunday on besieged
Abadan, the oil refinery city at the
southern end of the invasion front,
ldlling 22 Iranians and destroyln~
five crude oil storage tanka.
It.said Iraqi anlHilrcraft batteries
Shot down four Iranian jets and a
~Ueopter in the area, and that Iraqi
heUeopter gunships !at Iranian
positions 300 miles from Abadan, at
the northern end of the front Iraq
established w!Jen it invaded Iran
eight weeks ago to secure complete
'control of the Sbatt al-Arab estuary,
at the southern.end of the horder between the two countries

INSPECT RUINS - Paul Hodges and his sister
inspect their parents' home destroyed Sunday
inlhe town of Bradbury nort~west of Los Angeles when

Do~othy

a brush fire raced through the area destroying over '15
homes and causing thousands of residents to flee their
homes. ( AP Laserphoto).

�1-fhe ..........
lllll~eJI,
~~. Mlddleport..~oouy,O.,Monday,Nov.17,1980

Z. -'niP. Jla.Uv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.;Monday, Nov.17,1980

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Opinions &amp;

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Comments

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I

Steelers aliVe after big vrctory

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By ANoelat ·~ Prat
~ Pittsburgh Steelers,led by the
jiUslng l.olillbinatlon of Terry Brad"-wand 14M Swann, borrOwed the

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fiiCCet!lll formula of Cleveland's

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111E DAILY SENTINEL
1USPS IU.Ml
DEVOTED 1ll 111E
INTEIU!STOF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
· Letten of op111Joa aft wdcomed. Tbey abou.Ld - Ita tUa M wi:IIWJoq {or 1ubjttt to ftdat-.
Uoa by tb\editorl ud m'llt bt al.ped wltb the alpee's addnu. Names m111 be wl~..,..
pubUcatloa. Howenr, oo request. uma • ·W be dJKICJRd. Let&amp;.r:n ahookl be a 1* tute, addrcaalq luun, aot penoaUtin.
Pubi.Wied dally e:&amp;:ctpt S.turdly by The Ohio Villey PllbliJidllf: Compu)"" Multimedl.l, IDe.,
lll Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio &amp;571! . Bus laesa Office PltoDe 1ft.. %151. Editorial Pbftt M-!l$'7.
Sec.,.t rlau P"iaiJe paid at Pomeroy, ObJo.
' Na.._l advertislq: reprnutiUve, LaDd.oa Auotllkt, Ull Euclid An., OevN.t. a...

1

44115.
Tbc Assod•tnl Pres• b ndmlvely entitled to ~ UH '" pubtictdoa of aU aews dilplte._ .
crec:Uttd to ttle unrspaper aDd abo lhe. loeal aewa pubiJabed llerelll.
Publlsbet"

RGbert Wla&amp;elt

General Mer. &amp; City EdUor
New11 Editor

Rober1 Hoeflich

~~

DilieR•IIIIeb. Jr.

~ ........_.._-ror'T'BI!c:::lo.,..

Letters to e.d itor

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Thankful, too
Dear Editor:
The Library Levy Committee of
. Meigs County wishes to extend its
gratitude to the 2,520 voters who
showed their support of our levy
through their vote, and to the many

others who helped in our drive to
spread the word.
Thank you. - Members of the
Library,( Levy Committee.
Michael Sclunidt, (Treasurer).

•

Expresses thanks
The Meigs CoWJty Jaycees would
like to take this opportwlity to thank
all the people who helped make this
year's Haunted House a success.
This list includes the media, the
Jayc~ttes, the Jaycees and other
people who built, maintained and
ran the Haunted House this year.
Also a special thanks goes to the
Mike Powell family of Middleport

and to the people who went through
the Haunted House.
Co-cllairmen of this project this
year were Mitchell Meadows and
Sherman White. All of the monsters,
ghosts and people mentioned abilve
had a fun time. We sincerely hope
everyone who came through did too.
Sincerely. - Meigs County
Jaycees, Mike Mullen.

Contradictions:
they happen all the time
..

ByDooGraff
A disturbing headline appeared in
the New York Times recently :
"Saudis, rebuffed by Carter, warn
they may go elsewhere for anns."
The stery, in brief, is that' Saudi
Arabia has· requested bomb racks
for the 60 F-15 fighters it has ordered
from the United States and
collect the garbage, I don't mind Washington has turned it down. A
paying to get · it bilUJed any. It's contradictory response, it might a~
only fair to the people of Pomeroy pear, considering that Washington
and Middleport that we all pay to get has already demonstrated its concern
at
Sa
rid of it.
udi
Arabia's
exposed
position
in
the
Mr. Jones, our commisaloner, will
see this problem through. He has ' warring Mideast by agreeing to
provide, at Saudi request, four elecbefore and he will now. So to the
tornic surveillance planes.
collllllissioners of Meigs County:
The explanation is that the latter
The only fair way to collect garbage
do not have &lt;tfensive
planes
is to have one hauler with good
capability,
the foniler do. The
equipment and gOOd workers and
prospect
of
employment of bombreasponable prices tO pick up our
equipped
F-15s
by a hostile Arab
garbage. That's the easy way out.but
state
is
strenuously
opposed by
for another ·way that's your depart·
Israel,
for
whose
exposed
position
ment.
Washington
has
equal
concern.
Yours truly. - Floyd H. Cleland,
So what else is new? The United
Rutland, Ohio 45775.
States is once again caught between
the contradictory Interests of two

Is justice here?
Well, it seems that justice has
finally come to Meigs County. It
started hack when the county put in
the dwnpsters along the highways
and back roads. I had no doubt that
the levy wouldn't pass. Why should
it? Most of the people in Middleport
and Pomeroy have to pay to get rid
of their garbage. Anyone with a
mind of his own would see that this
was dead wrong for the county to put
out these boxes to collect garbage.
Anyway, private haulers of the
coWJty have been trying to make ends meet for years. As a concerned
citizen of Meigs I am for a private
hauler with the right equipment to
haul the garbage with set fee to

.Medic_a l Board
bill delayed
House action on a Senate-passed bill giving the Ohio Medical Board new
powers to police physicians has been delayed following 1111&gt;-hour ·complaints about the measure,
The House Rules Conunittee sent the bill, sponsored by Sen. Marcus A.
Roberto, [).Ravenna, back to the Health and Retirement Committee for
further study.
Rep. John D. Thompson, ~eveland, conunittee chairman, said the
panel plans to consider several amendments before clearing the way for
a possible floor vote next week.
Reconsideration of the bill came as lawmakers returned to the
Statehouse on Wednesday for a post-election session expected to lalt two
or three weeks.
The House called for a vote today on a measure designed to protect
residential property OW!]jlrs from inflation-sparked hikes in real estate
taxes. The bill, sponsored tiy· Rep. William E. Hinig, O.New Philadelphia,
contains the legal mechanics needed to implement State Issue I, which
was approved by voters Nov. 4.
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The measure allows property to be split into two categories for a~
plying tax reduetions to certain classes of real estate affected by periodic
reappraisals. Such classification had been prohibited by tilt Obio Constitution prior to the amendment approved by voters.
Under the pending measure, county auditors are required to classify
each parcel of property as being residential-agricultural or pmt of a
second class covering aU other land such as conunercial-industrlal. Rules
for the classification are to be adopted by the state Commissioner of Tax
Equalization. Separate tax reduction factors will be computed by the
commissioner for each of the two classes.

Berry's ·World

agreement for training and equi~
ping of Saudi security forces. They
are naturals as an alternative anns
source for the Saudis and others.

mutually antagonistic clients. It
happens all the time.
True, except that here we have an
especially insightful instance of how
convoluted the Mideast situation has
become.
Back to that headline, where is the
"elsewhere" the Saudis might have
in mind? Usually, the word is immediately understood to mean the
Soviet Union, and it is used
deliberately to shake up the war
game players in Washington (or in
much less frequent employment by
a Soviet client, it means the United
States, with the Kremlin expected to
be seized by a similar spasm).

~~
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"Hi, there/ I'm running for president snd I would
like to ssk you far your vot11in 1984."

But it raises some disturbing
prospects. If the Iran-Iraqi war
drags on, It could increa.singly
become a contest between French
and American anns, with which
what's left of the Iranian IIiilltary
estab!Wunent is equipped. Particularly so if release of the Tehran
hostages b.rtngs a reswnption of the ·
now of u.S. materiel to Iran. That is
.a situation that could have embarrassing repercussions within the
Western~. Sl,lch as it is.
It is, however, 3 situation Western
anns sellers have brought upon
themselves, and it could be even
worse for one of them.
·

France is, after . the two superpowers, the world's third-ranking
anns supplier and far and away the
most active in the go-go Mideast
market. lt has already' supplied
belligerent Iraq with s6me $2 billion
worth of sophisticated equipment
and more is reported in the pipeline,
including rockets, field guns and
possibly Mirage jets.
The French are proving themselves to be very much friends in
need for the Iraqis at a tme when the
Not in the case of the super- latter's traditional suppliers, the
Supj!ose Saudi Arabia, for all Its
conservative Saudis, however. They Soviets; appear to have turned skill to date in dodging actual in~ve in ~nd. another uelsewhere" . down, if not completely off, the flow
volvement during during more than
With which they and some of their
f anns~
three decades of intennlttent
neighbors are already well acquainFor the French, it is part pure Mideastern conflicts, is dra~ tnto
ted.
iness and part sluirp politics. the present war on the side of Iraq.
Fra.nce. The French already have . aris apparently see5 the regime in That would mean Saudis with the
contracted to provide the Saudis
ghdadasdestinedtoemergefrom latest in U. S. weapons fighting
with $3.5 billion.worth of small war- the present upheaval as the . Iranians with the, latest in U. S.
ships and Coast-defense equipment, strongest presence in the area, and weapons, or close to.it.
and they have just signed an it wants to be in with a winner.
Now that's disturbing_

"Kardlac Kidll" to beat the Browns
and cllmb right back Into the
National Football Iague playoff'
chue.
"We won it when wv had to. We
didn't bcackle under pressure. We
played Steeler football again," said
Bradahaw, whose S.yard scoring
pus to SWIUUI with 11 secondB to
jilay SUndli:r gave Pittsburgh ' a
cruclal16-13 victory over Cleveland.
For most of thiueason It has been
Cleveland which pulled out games In
the clQIIing mlnutes, but this time
J?lttsburgh turned the tables on the
Browns and won a heart-stopper of
Its own.
Asked his reaction to the Brada!law.Swann game-winner, Steelers
Coach Chllck Noll heaved a sigh and
liald, "Aaaahhh! And that was my
emotion thrOughout the whole game,
llotjusttheend."
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, The victory Ufted Pittsburgh,
I"'Uch had lost three in a row earlier
~tl\is season, to a H record and a tie
·;with Cleveland, one game behind first-place Houston in the .American
Conference's Central Division. The
Oilers beat the Chicago Bears 10-6
behind a careei;.hlgh 206 yards
rushing by Earl Campbell.
"We've got a chance now. We're
not out of It," said Bl:adllhaw, who
had limped to the sidelines ilfter
being hit by Cleveland's Lyle Alzado
with 25 seconds left to play, but
came back out to lead the Steelers to
victory.
In other NFL games SWJday, the
Philadelphia Eagles blanked the
Washington Redskins 24-ll, the
Dallas CoWboys beat the St. Louis
Cardinals 31'21, the Atlanta Falcons
defeated the New Orleans Saints 3113, the Buffalo Bills shut out the Cincinnati Bengals 14-0, the Los Angeles
Ramll edged the . New England
Patriots 17-14, the Minnesota
VIkings oUtscored the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers 38-30, the San Diego ·
Cbargers downed the Kansas City
Chiefs 7JI.7, the Miami Dolphins nippeel the ~ Franciaco 49ers 17-13,
the Denver Nuggets beat the New
York Jets 31-24, the Baltimore COlts
edged the Detroit Uohs 11).9 and the
NewYorkGlantsdefeatedtheGreen
Bay Packera 27-21.
Oakland plays at Seattle Monday
night.
Swann caught a ~ nine
J

.

passes for 138 yards, but the big one
was a short Oip into the left side of
the end zone to cap the comeback af.
ter Cleveland seemingly had the
game won.
The BI'QWIIS, leading 1:H, had
stopped Pittsburgh · on a goalllne
stand with less than three minutes to
play. But they couldn't move the
ball, so they tO!lk an Intentional
safety and then used a free kick to
give It to the Steelers on their own 46
with1:C.toplay,
Completioris of 24 yards to Thea
Bell and 23 yards to' SWllllll, plus a
holdillg penalty against Cleveland
safety Clarence Scott, moved the
ball to the 3. Brailshaw then sprinted
out to his I~ spotted Swanrl one
step ahead of Browns defensive back
Ron Bolton and completed the short
toss for the winning score.
"It was an Illegal play all the
way," charged Bolton, contending
that Bell had set a pick to free Swann
in the end zone. "He couldn't beat
me unless it was."
"I think they're just trying to find
a reason to riplain llllilng," respQnded Swann, who said he had been
elbOwed by Bolti!Jl throughout the
gaqte. "I wanted to spike the ball
right In front of him (Bolton), but I
couldn'tfindhlm."
Oilers 10, Bears I
Campbell, who carrlecl 31 times,
raised his season totals to a league- .
leading 1,300 yards on 245 carries for
the Oilers, who got the only touch-·
down of the game on an &amp;-yard pass
from Gifford Neilsen to Tom WUson
on a fake field goal play just before
halftime.
Toni Fritsch kicked a $yard field
goalforHouston'sotherpoints.
Eacles 24, Raloldna 0
Philadelphia won its seventh In a
row ahd raised its record to 11).1,
best in the NFL, by ln'eezing past the
struggling Redsklns as Ron Jaworski threw a pair of scoring pa.Ws.
''l told this team before the season
started that If we beat Dallas In
Philadelphis and the Redsklns tn
Washington, we'd.win the division,"
said Coach Dick V!!nnell. "Well,
· here we are."
Cowboys 31, Cardinals Z1
Danny White threw three scoring
passes and Drew ·Pearson became
the Cowboys' all-time receiving
leader with his 366th career catch as
Dallas raised its record to 11-3 by
beating St. Louts. Although trailing
Philadelphia by two games tn the
NFC Ea.!t, the Cowboys have the
second-best record In the conference

Energj imiovation: basic requirement
ness what we have done. familiar with.them ...
"For years we controlled the price
"One cause is a loss.of spirit by the
(and
umjerpriced) natural lias, and ·.
public. There are proliferating fears
and misuse
of risk-taking arid unfamiliar thus encouraged
technologf. These are reinforced by of this premiwn fuel while nmntng
volatile govermnent regulation and down our reserves. We. even rebuf·
by loss of confidence tn institutions • fed the Mexicans when we could
have enlarged our loiJg-run supply at
of all kinds.
"When we are not fearful and un- bargain price&amp;
"In response ~ OPEC we concertain, we are contentious. It is a
fact that the United States has four trolled jlomestlc crude oil prices
below world levels and subsidized
times as many
lawyers per capita as West . import! on a large !C8le through an
Germany, and 20 times as many as entitlements program.
"We are now decontrolling
~ Japan."
domestic
oil prices gradually, rather
-From an article by Prof. Walter
than
Instantaneously,
and adding an· ·
D. Fackler, in "Issues ·. Ideas," a
excess profits tix on production of ,
University of Chicago publication:
"No one can peer ahead at the ·domestic oil. Gradualism here Is
1980s without seeing energy sbnply stupid because · .It creates
problems. What can one say eKcept large and certain financial inthat energy is a disaster area .•• Wit· centives to delay production."

NEW YORK (AP) - The ·Science:
"The problems of innovation
and 'moderate cost of
today are usually docwnented by
energy, and the willtngness and
ability to innovate are ainong the statistics on research and develo~
most basic requirements in ment budgets; particularly as a perrestoring . vitality to the United cent of gross national product. The
States economy.
U.S. figure has been stagnant while
. Few knowledgeable critics dispute others have been increasing ...
tliat assertion, but there exists great
" Actually, there is a sense 6f
disagreement on how to bring It vitality in industrial research and
about. The goal is clear, it seems,
development. Industry's R&amp;D
but the route isn't. And maybe not
budgets have been rising steadily
since 1972, and last year U.S. in· even the starting line,
·
Here are two observations on the dustry spent a record $24 billion of
· situation that might bririg the starits own funds on R• ;D for new
ting line into better focus.
technologies for the 80s and beyond
· · -Froman address by E.E. David,
president of Exxon Research and
"The problem today is not with inEngineering Co., fonner science ail- dustrial support levels. The problem
vtsor to the president and former · is with the declining demand for
president of the American
what Rx D produces. Ti)e symptoms
are clear enough and most of you are
Association for the Advancement of
~vailabllity

overuse

The 'old fashioned way' of keeping warm
By Robert Walters
about conservation and the grOWing
SPOKANE, Wash. (NEA) '
pop\Jlarity of a hack-to-basics
Marilyn 'Fichtenberg is a relatiyely philOSOphy now have combined to
recent convert to the ranks of those . p!'OQuce a drainatic renaissance for
who heat their bomes with wOOd wood-burning stoves.
stoves, but she's already an enAn analysis conunissioned by the
thusiastic booster of "the old· Bonneville Power Administration
fashioned way" of keeping warm in shows that woOd now heats 2.4 perthe winter.
"It's great. I really enjoy it- and
it's economical and efficient," says
Mrs. Fichtenberg, who lives with
her husband on a farm outside the
city. "We buUd up a fire before we
go to bed and it heats the whole
· house overnight."
cent of an American homes, almost '
The· Fichtenbergs are among · twice as many as five years ago. In
milllons of American famllies who . Oregon, Washington, Idaho and .
have turned to wood ~ther than oU,
Montana, the comparable figure is
gas, coal or electricity as a fuel for
10.2 percent.
space heating, thus rever,,ing a
On the other side of the contt.nent,
decade.long trend and belplng to a survey conducted by the Maine
'reduce petrolewn imports.
Audubon Society shows that 46 perA8 recently as 1940, wood was the
cent of all homeowners in the state
primary source of beat for more
burned wood in stoves, furnaces or
thah 52 percent of all homes here in
fireplaces during the winter of 1977the Pacific Northwest and almost 23
~' '
percent of aU houses throughout the
Those interviewed estimated they
country.
reduced their winter heating bllls j)y
·But those figures plwnmeted in
an average of 44 percent of • per.
the wake of the post-World War D
household. "With aavings Hke that,
housing boom. By 11175, only 1.3 perIt's not surprlaing that 98 percent of
cent of all the nation's hou.lehold!l
all wood burners intend to continue.
relied on wood as their main heating
ualng firewood," . aays Audubon of.
fuel.
flclal Eilzabeth Swain.
·
Soaring prices for "conventional"
In the South, the Tennessee Valley
fuels, increased public concern
Authority is promoflng firewood as a ·

demonstr~

fuel in a
project that
involves providing interest-free·
loans to members of a Georgia rural·
electric cooperative who .are in- ·
terested in buying WOld-burning
stoves.
.
A nationwide survey .co'nciucted
last year by the Gallup Organization .

.
..
A LOB FOR LOG~ .!... Cleveland Browns' Dave Logan, 85, C01:1ea
down With. a second qUarter touchdown pua from Brian Slpe for the
Browns second toocbdo!lm of the day as Steelers' Donnie Shall, 31, falls to
break up the pau. (AP

.

State

nation's energy problems. The,
Georgta.Paclflc Corp., . one of the
country's tiinber companies, .
estimates that wood ~d replace
opiy 10 percent of all current energy
sources If all new forest growth was ,
burned every year. .
:
Wood stoves, AJJP"d•lly thoee Installed or maintained improperly,
;can be aeri01111 fire hazards. In.'
tenaive cultivation aDci act'eleratecl,'
harvesting of timber land could'
produce adverse lq-tenn conaequences for the country's forests. ,
But wood c:an become a lijpllflc:an~'
,element in the blend of energy 110111'-'
ces. The technology Is well
eiltabllahed, the COCit ia relatiYeiy;
low, the resource Ia ••-able and'

for the Wood Energy Institute found '
that 5 mllllon homeowners now have :
a working wood stove and an eqUIII
nwnberhavegivena "great deal" of:
thought to buying one. When respon- · theenvironmentaiCC~V~eC~uenceam
dents in that survey were asked· . minbnal.
·
'
what meaiU1'C!II they had taken to
;
reduce home heating costs, burning
A well-coordinated effort t~
wood ranked fourth, behind only 'prcmote wood u a 11011rce of heat
lowering the thennoetat, inlulating could redaee the Clllllllry's c1epen&lt;
the house and lnatalllng lltOm\ win- dence Oil impolilld oil by 2 mllHCIIl '
dows and
blrrell per day or more wblle cut. Althoul!h lndultrlal and CGm- ting beating COitl In half for many
mercia! appllcatlona remali! hoii61WDUI.
limited, wood Ill used u tbe prlinar)
'1'We II nO ~ to
fuel at a rubber company and resort overdo plaatle upelldlblreal
hotel In Dixville Noleh, N. H., a howePer. Tbe IIIR*I'I ol the
paper rnlU In Gilman, Vt., a tatile pn111'811111arnmpilu111Dathetmce·
rnlU In Aragon; Ga., and ICOnll of. eredlt hu been lltaNia!Md, It 11 to
similar facilities throu8hout the be UMd with l'lllltralnt and I'8JIIIGD'
COIUitry.
'
llibillty.
·.
W~ L• not a panaceas for the
Sare,.IIUre.
'

doors:

l

'

f,

and are In prime Position for a wild
playoff berth.
"I'm not c;oncefned wbere we are
in the standlnga or how we got
there," said Cowboys Coach Tom
Landry. "I ju,&amp; want to get Into the
playoffs. That's aU I'm worried
about."
Fll- 31, s.lidl u
Atlanta won Its fifth in a row to
remain one game ahead of Los
Angela in the NFC West ·as Steve
Bartkowakl threw three touchdown
paaaes and ran for another score.
"We're tired of losing ai'ound
here," said BartkoWski. "Now that

to jUBt nine firlit downs and 213 net
yaniB.
."We didn't do anything offensively
at all," admitted Bengals Coach
Forrest Gregg. "We were very, very
poor. And that pretty well tells the
story of the game."
Rulll17, Palrlots U
Loa Angeles stayed one game back
of Atlanta, and knocked New
England one game behind Buffalo,
thanks to Elvis Peacock's 1-yard
scortns nm late IIi the third quarter.
The TO waa set up by a 44-yard pass .
from Vince FeJTagamo to Preston
Dennard on a fiea·Oickerplay.

card

'

--··--

c~mpion.ship
'

pairings

'

we've had a taste of winning, we
know what It's like."
The Saints haven't ·had even a
taste of winning thla season. The loss
dropped them to 6-11.
"There's not much to say after 11
straight losses," Coach Dick Nolan
of the Saints said. "We played hard,
we kept fighting but we kept beating

ourselves."

-v

HEARING TESTS SEt
Fer PomiiUJ, Ohio
ELECTRONIC ·
HEARING lfSTs
w"mBe Given ~Y
Mr. H. w. Manlllgly
.
BEL TO~Ei CO..sultailt Wllo Will Be At:
MEIGS t NN-POMEROY, OHIO
THURSDAY, NOV. 20, lfiG . t A.M. to 12 Noon
·AnYo!M'Who iiiiir'oublelleerlng Is w.tcome 1o hew e hurlng twt us·
lng modern electronic equipment lo determine If hll 101111 - Which

(Continued on page 4)

Swann settles
persrinal score
PI'I'l'SBURGH (AP) - Lynn
SWIUUI settled a personal score with
Ron Bolton with a toucbdown catch
that gave the Pittsburgh Steelers a
1&amp;-13 victory over the Cleveland
Browns.
•
"I wanted to spike the ball right In
front of-him (Bolton), but I couldn't
find him," said Swann, who clabned
he'd been the victim ~ earlier
elbows and cheap shots by Bolton.
But Bolton, the Browns' combative left cornerback, said the play
that led to Swann's 3-yard reception
with 11 seconda left Sunday was
clearly illegal.
"He couldn't beat me unless it ·
was," charged Bolton.
Swann and fellow wide receiver
Theo Bell Cl'is8-crClslle on the play,
and Bolton clabned he was
physically · screened by Bell from
covering Swann.
SuCh a manuever is dislgnated as
an !Uei!al . ''pick" under National
Football League rules, _but the of.
ficlals didn't support Bolton.
"It wu an illegal play. It was a
pick play,'' said Bolton•
Cleveland safety tl1om Darden
tried to cover Swann, but he was too .
late as TeiT)' Bradshaw Oicked the
pass Into the chest of the Steeler
receiver, who had a career-high nine

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Only at participating neighborhood Burger Chef Restaurants.

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Open for Breakfast6-10:30 &amp;.m.

QUE
~~I tummy ·

thermostat .down,
but our gas bill
How come?"

Cotho&gt;

The Rams' defense forced four .
turnovers by New England tn LOs
Angeles territory. ·
"We had plenty of chances to
win," said New England Coach Ron .
Erhardt. "But we didn't capitalize.
We didn't score. If we didn't fwnble.... "
.
Vlkiugs38, Buccueers 30
Tommy Kramer completed 24 of
"R passes for 324 yaniB and two
touchdowns and Ted Brown rushed
for two scores as Minnesota beat
Tampa Bay despite a brilliant per·
fonnance by Bucs passer Doug
Williams, who hit on 30 of 55 for 486

99¢
BR.FAKFASI'
...

·

BOla lC, Balpla 0
Buffalo took over sole ~ion
of first place tn the AFC East by
posting Its first shutout of the
season. The Bills llmlted Cincinnati

still goes up.
TllllD ~ lf.N ... -

his being a top quarterback?" asked
Minnesota Coach Bud (lrant abolt
the Buccaneers' oft-maligned

1980

catches.
''They ran a pick. I lrled to get
over In time to cover him but obviously hras too late." said Darden.

4serPhoto).

Today's
commentary
.

@ 1980byNE.Ainc.

yards and four TO::.
"Now, is there any questlon about

•

. '.

ANSWER:
''Most of the increase
comes right from the
wellthe higher prices
Columbia has to pay."
Moet of Columbia!! natural gas liupplies do not
begin as ours but muat be pun:hased. And since
Jlllllll88" of~ 1978 Natural Gas Po~cy Act, which
allows gradual lifting of wellhead pnoe U!tltrols to
ellOO\li'Bge gas exploration, .11¥: price ~lumbia
pays for eas baa been steadily lllCI'e88lllg.
Added to that are the rising costs of maintain·
ing and improving pipelines, storage facilities
and aervices.
So rates have been going up. However, at
Columbia we're doing all we can to hold down
ooet:li. We're investing in more efficient equipment
and streamliniDg operati008. Bi-monthly estimated bills are one savings you're probably
' familiar with.
'
.
In short, we're cutting where we can to keep ·
your gas bill!Dcreaaes to a minimum.
And though your gas bill.may be higber ~
you or we would like to eee1t, natural gas still
c:oeta you leal than other energy fomlll.
For ideas on ways to make natural gaa work
even more efllciently for you, ask for our free
. pamphlet, 'The Eveeyd&amp;y Energy Saver's Guide".

may 111 11e1~:· some of the ceuMS of hNrlng lou will Ill explained

and dlagrerns of hOW tt1e ear works will Ill lhoWn.
We AIIO s••lce end Repair All Mek11 o!HHriRI Aids.
'
lattlwl Ud SUPIIIIII For All Makes For $til.

CA. .

IF YOU
NOT COME iNCALL FORA HOME APPOINTMENT .
'
PHONE "2-3629

......MBI~G'lS

Still your best eneJW value.
And we want to keep 1t that WIJ!:I.

�•'

Moeller faces Massillon
on Dayton turf Saturday

LAST SECOND SCORE - Steelers' Lynn Swann,
88, takes a three yard pass from quarterback Terry
Bradshaw with 17 seconds remaining in the game to

· By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
Gerry Faust has his wish. Cincinnati Moeller will be playing
Massillon for the Division I state
high school footbaU title in the southwestern part of Ohio.
"It's too costly for us to keep
coming up here," Faust, to{oeller's
coach, told Massillon Coach Mike
Currence after viewing the Tigers'
Zl-li semifinal victory over Willough·
by South in the Akron Rubber Bowl
Saturday night.
.
"It's COI!t us $4,000 per trip up nor·
th. That really puts us in a big hole
every year," Faust said.
·
That was one of the reasons the
governing Ohio High School Athletic
Association decided to play the
MoeUer·MassiUon showdown in
Dayton's Welcome Stadiwn Satur·
day night.
"The region Moeller is in has
traveled to the state championship
game five of the last six years. We
hope to start a rotation with the
championship in. the south one
season and north the next year. I
think that's only fair," OHSAA Com- ·
missioner Dick Annstrong said Sun·
day.
Faust was happy with· the
decision, saying, "It's nice of the

pull ahead of the Browns 16-13. Thorn Darden (27) attempting to stop him from scoring during..Sunday's
game played in Pittsburgh. (APLaserphoto).

Steeiers alive ·after big victory
(Continued from Page 3)
Williams. "He put on quite a show
out there."

"I don't get off on individual
things," reSpOnded Williams. "I'd
rather win."

Chargers 20, Chiefs 7
Mike Thomas, replacing the injured Chuck Muncie and John CappeUetti, ran for 109 yards and two
touchdowns for San Diego. It was
Thomas' first too-yard game in
nearly four years.
Dolpblns 17, 49ers 13
Rookie David Woodley tossed two

touchdown passes to send San Fran·
cisco to its eighth straight loss.
Broncos 31, Jets 24
Denver rallied from a 17-3 deficit
to win behind Craig Morton, who
passed for 306 yards and two touchdowns. It was the first time Morton
has surpassed 300 yards in his four
seasons with the Broncos.
Morton completed nine passes in a
row during the third half to help the
Broncos score on three straight
possessions. The winning margin
was a 13-yard TD toss to Rick Upchurch with5:24left to play.

For the
American Contereace
East
W L T Pd. PF PA
Buffalo
a 3 o :m 238 175
New England
7 ' 0 .636 302 238
5 s
6 's
2 9
Central

Baltimore

Miami '
N.Y. Jets
Houston
Cleveland
Pi!t.burgh
Cincinnati

.8

3

1

&lt;

o :m

~

3

8

1114
0 .636 2&lt;2 223
0 .636 278 Z21
0 .273 142 7nl

7

3

0 .700 259 · 219

7 &lt;

.....

Ookland
San Diego
Denver

0 .545 231 23)
0 .St5 175 204
0 .182 200 274

1 4 0 .636300211

6

S 0 .SIS
6 0 .456
&lt; 6 0 .100
NaUooal Coalerener
Eut
Plliladelphla
10 I o .m
oaua..
8 3 0 .727
N.Y. Giants
3 8 0 .273
St. LoW..
3 8 0 .273
Wa..hington
3 8 B .Z73
Central
Detroit
6 5 {) - ~
6 5 0 .SIS
Minneo&lt;lta
Green Bay
4 6 1 .109
·Tampa Bay
4 6 I .109
Chicago
&lt; 1 {) .364

s

Kansas City
Seattle

.....
a

Atlanta
LOs Angeles

o

3

211 222

'IJ1I 210
!!IS 229
292 135
321 216
185 320

229 lSI
!511 232
219 198

216
178
20&lt;
175

210
231
238
111:2

:m~202

7 4 0 .636 294 2211
3 8 0 .273 226 310.
0 11 0 .1100 Ill 3&lt;1
SIUlday'a Games
Baltimore 10, Detroit 9
Buffalo 14, Cincinnati 0
Pittsburgh 16, Oeveland 13
NeW York Giants 'll, Green Bay 21
lMI Angeles 17, New England 14
Atlanta 31, New Orleans 13
Philadelphia 2f, Washington 0
Minnesota 311, Tampa Bay 30
Da!W 31, St.Lollls 21
Houston 10, Chicago 6
8an Diego 31, Kansas City 7
Denver 31, . New York Jets 24
Miami 17, San Franciaco 13
Mllllllay'1 Gamf!
oakland at Seattle, (n}
n.andly'a Game
San Diego at Miami., (n)
Swmy, Nov.D
• Baltimore at New England
. Odcago at Atlanta
• Clncinnatt at Oeveland
Detroi.t at Tampa Bay
· Houston at New York Jets

San Francisco
New Orleans

• Oakland at Plliladelphla

record~---

5 15
' 15
Westen Coofen:oce
Midwest Dtvkloo .

Natlou.U F ..tball Lupe

San Antonio

It

Utah

12

1

9
7
6

II

Karioas City
Denver
Houston

Dau.,

3

$

10 .
9
16

PaetfJc DlvtiJoo
15
3
It
5

Phoenix
LOs Angeles

11
9
6

.250
.211
.1'!1
.832

10
10\'o

2
6
6

.&lt;29
.&lt;12
.100
.1511

6
11

.1133

-

:m
.1147
.m

•
10 .
San Diego
12
.333
Porilimd
s 13 .273
Saturday'a Games
Washington 100, Atlanta 88
New York 100, Cleveland ~
Philadelphia 11$, New Jersey 108
San Antonio 121. Ublh 104
Denver 125, Portland 123
Kansas City 96, San Diego 94
Golden State 119, Phoeni:J: 108
SeatUe lU, Houston 139, OT
Buday's Gamel
New Jersey 89, Detroit M
Chicago lU, MilWaukee liM!
Phoenix 119, Pmtland 10'1
Los Angeles no, Dal1u 102
Moact.y'aGames
No games scheduled
·
Taeaday's Games
Plliladelphla at New Yort;
San Dieg() at Cleve4md
Golden State at Washington
San Antonio at Auanta
Indiana at Detroit
Phoenix at Dallas
Boston at Chicago
Seattle at Houston
Milwaukee at Utah
Kansas City at LOs Angeles
Denver at Portland
Golden State

SeatUe

I

Colts 10, Uons 9
Rookie Lynn Dickey scored the
only touchdown of the game .on a 1·
yard run capping the opening drive,
ll!ld Steve Mike-Mayer added a 43yard field goal. Detroit's Eddie
Murray kicked three field goals but
missed on a 44-yard try with 29
seconds left.
Giants Z7, Packers 21
Phil Simms hooked up with EBI'nest Gray on touchdown passes of 50,
20 and 4 yards to carry the Giants
past Green Bay. It was New York's
second win in a row after losing
eight straight.

".
3\'o

6\'o
9
10

LosAngelee
Montreal
Hartford
Pittsbtallh
Detroit

Minneoota
Buffalo

• Torooto
Boston
Quebec

Wales Coafereuce
Norrtl Dtvilbt
12 5 I 19 ll2 25
1 2 19 54 ~ i 9 4 59 114 It
i 10 3678313
3 11 3 56 1S I
Adami Dlvlllau
10 2 3 12 42 .23
9 3 5Mt523
9 5 2 71 ' 83 20
i 9 356591J
10 5 I&amp; 10

'

z

So-yo G"""'

Philadelphia 5, Detroit 2
Washln@ton a, Hartford 4

NY b1and&lt;ra t, Buffalo 1

Booton 7, Pltllbargh &lt;
TO&lt;OOIJ&gt; ' · Edmooton l

'

Deny allegations

association to do this. It gives our
Uc (11-1-4) In tbe Dlvlll.on V
fans an opportwlity to see us closer •final at Arlin Field In Manlfleld.
to home."
ty ellminated·CnMilllv!De 1+11
Armstrong said 11,000-seat and
emont Olllled Arcbbold ~7
Welcome Stadium was chosen in tbe vialon IV llelllifllla1l Slltur'because %7,000-seat Nippert Stadium day
t. Newark Cathollc bounced
"on the University of Cincinnati cam- Cov1ngt 14-10 and Calvert IICCII'ed
pus was unavailable and Riverfront on the
play ol tbe game to llllllle
Stadium, with arouni:l 60,000 ,..:M:.og::::=:a::.z.:..;&amp;-0_;,;...- - - - - capacity, was too expensive.
Tile Rubber Bowl, of course, was
LEGAL .NOTICE
ruled out for the big school title
The
Public Utilities Com·
game because It was the host of the
mission
of Ohio has set
ClassAAAchampionshipinl979. ·
for
public
hearing case
Annstrong sayS Upper Arlington ·
No.
80·242-El·FAC,
to
High School's stadiwn, with 9,500
review
the
fuel
procure·
seats, was chosen as the Division II
ment practices ant! poli·
site because of its Ioc;ation. "It's
cies of The Ohio Power
halfway between Lebanon and
Company, the ooperation
Youngstown," he said.
of its Fuel Cost Adjust~
Lebanon will carry a 1~ record
ment Clause, and related
against Youngstown Mooney's 1140
matters, This hearing is
mark in the Division II windup at the
scheduled at 1:00 p.m.
•
Columbus suburban school Friday
••
on Tuesday, NO\IIIITiber 18,
night.
1980 at the City Council
•·•
The other divisional chamOffice, 218 Cleveland
'
Ave., S.W .. Canton, Ohio
pionships also will be played Friday
'
44702.
With all games starting at 7:30p.m.
Cleveland Benedictine (111-1-4)
All intsrested persons will
be given an opportunity
faces Hamilton Badin (1~) at
to be heard. Further lnfor·
Springfield's Evans Stadium in
mation may be obtained
Division Ill.
· by contacting the ComIn Division IV, Garfield Heights
mi~sion .
Trinity (11+0) plays Cinciilllati
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
Mariemont (111-2-0) at Columbus
COMMISSION OF OHIO
Whetstone High School. Tiffin
By: David M. Polk·,
Calvert (1~2-0) tangles with Newark

Secretary .

.•..• '
H

.•' '
',

QUANTITY

OPIN DAILY FROM
'
I AM TILL. 10 PM

IIU11.1Tii\l

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SWIFT LI'L41&gt;·10 LB. AVERAGE

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SUPERIOR WHOLE

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WIENERS·······················~

rnnkhnnk inrlurh•rt

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FRESH
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992·2971

We acc•pt Food Stamps

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On Ohio Sales Tax price increase, and Pat Hill
Ford's Inc. big Discount on all ·1980 or 1981
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Order or choose from stock NOW!
Golden Mountaineer Club &amp; Golden Buckeye Club Cards Honored

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STUFFING··········· ••••• •••••·•• ••
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HEAVY .DUTY FOIL. ..... ~. sq."·

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STORES • CARDINAl fOOD STORES ..,-ar.~~x•ji'I'J~iltr.l~l

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69~· .

TIDE. ···················
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CE CREAM..............

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12 Gal.

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5

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bag I

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TOPPINGMIX

COOL WHIP••••••••••••••••• J;.;t.
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BAKING
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BOTTLES

BIRDS·EYS

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•
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than your furnace.
The add-on heat
pump and your fur- ·
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could save energy ·
and money.
Together, they'll
also give you a
hedge against the ·
anticipated rising
cost of fuels.
If you think it's
time you and the
.add-on electric heat .
pump got together,
or stop by our
'nfflr.A We'll intra-

FLOUR

TAB, or ·

Can

~

Before winter sets in, give
your furnace an add·o.n
heat pump .
You could save
energy and money.
Because the add-on
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gardless of the type· ·
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The heat pump
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oz.

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FOLGERS

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ORDER YOUR
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1

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COFFEE.

.,•

• New York Giants at San Fran cis&lt;:&lt;~
• Seattle at Denver
• Washington at Dallas
:
MODIIIy,Nov.U
• lm Angeles at New Orleans, (n)

81;

GOLD MEDAL

•

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Can

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NaUooal Hockey Leape
CampbeD Cealermce
Patrick DJvlaioa
W L T GFGAPtl
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SJIIYII&gt;&lt; Dlvtlloo
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St. Louis
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Vancouver
a e t6889:ll\
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6 9 5 1&lt; Ill 17
Chicago
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FLOUR
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CRANBERRIES.. !:L~~-~~~- 77~ ·

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$ 00

DEL MONTE SL.ICED, CMUSHED, OR CHUNK

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FRESH

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accurate §etting

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Automatic Defroster

USDA CHOICE

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SLICED BAOON ••••••••••••••••••••-•••••••• • 149 . ARM or ENGLISH ROASr •••••••••••••~.:. $}89

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Cardnal Extra Fancy

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speed for type of food, style of cooking you
wan!. . •. ·
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End ·of-cook cycle audible
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: Pittsburatl at Buffalo
, Green

Tbe Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Nov. 17,191111

· ~--------------~~
VAUGHAN 15

NEW

ORLEANS (AP) - The
older brother of welterweight
chaUenger Sugar Ray Leonard
denies allegations of trying to spy on
champion Roberto Duran's training
camp.
"I'm not trying to agitate
anybody, and I'm not spying on
anybody," Roger Leonard said in a
statement Sunday.
"In fact my brother doesn't even
want to hear anything about Duran
or what's going on at his training
camp.''
.
Both fighters work out at the
Superdome, preparing for their-Nov.
25 rematch. But they train at dif.
ferent times during the day.
On Saturday, Duran stopped his
trainlng when he saw Roger
Leonard, Sugar Ray's older I?rother,
standing among the spectators. .
Duran charged toward the
challenger's brother but was
restrained by trainers.
Roger Leonard said he just happened to be at the training 'center
and stopped in to watch Duran
workout.
Duran took the World Boxing
Council title from Leonard in a Iiiround decision in June.

--...
-

~

$119 ~

:.,.
"'

~'*

~

CHEF· BOY·AR·DEE

49
MUFFIN
PIZZAS····
$1
. .Cheese, Pepperoni and
J
I '

Sausage Flavor·s

)

�•
1-'l'ben.DySao!:lnel, Mlddleport-Pwneroy, O.,Monday, Nov.!7,191l

Installation of officers highlighted
the recent meeting of the Chester
United Methodist Women held at the

church.

IS

Hospital patients remembered
by Rock Springs Grange
Plans for remembering Meigs
CoWJtlans at the Athens Mental
-Health Center .at Christmas time
were made when the Rock Springs
Grange met Thursday night at the
hall. Members are to leave items for
the Health Center with Mrs. Barbara Fry before Dec. 5.
During the meeting Roy Holter
was installed as steward of the
Grange by Master Fred Goeglein.
The county Grange officers meeting

.

the most American of our holidays
yet the depth of its roots in American
history is sometimes lost amid the
custom of turkey, dressing and pwnpkln pie. Mrs.. Roush closed with
prayer.
During the morning hours

•'

Serenity House, a new non-profit
oprganization, will address the
problems of family violence in
Jackson, Meigs and Gallia Counties
at a planning meeting this afternoon. "We are hoping to develop
programs, fheRers and other help
for battered family members," says
Lucy Amsbary. Middleport, interim
director of the Board of Directors,
Senenity House, Inc.
The meeting is open to the public.
"Now, at the planning stages, input
is welcome and needed mm people
throughout our communities," said
Amsbar)'. Tbe meeting will be belli
at • p.m. in the Multipurpose room of
the Mental Health Center,
Gallipolis.
For more information, call Phylis
Mason in Gallia at 44&amp;-5000, or Ellen
Bell in Meigs, 992-57l3.

of the

day, several groups of women
visited sick and shut-in friends of the
church. /1. visit was alao made to the
Pomeroy Health Care Center.

Mrs. Ruth Karr presided at the
meeting. She reported on the UMW
district meeting held at the Richland
Ave. Methodist Church in Athens. It
was noted that the Election Day dinner.and bazaar was a huge success.
A potluck Thanksgiving dinner will
be held at the church on Nov. 23. It
was noted that contributions bave
been received to , lnltlate new
lighting for the sanctuary. Anyone
wanting to contribute to the project
may contact either Kathryn Baum
or Betty Lqe Moore.

•

.

A "fun day" waa planned for'Dec.
4 at which time a trip will be taken to
· the Fenton Glua Co. at Wllllamstown.
Final plans were ma~ for the
Christmasprogramaoddlnnertobe
held in the fellowship room of the
churcbonDec. 11.1bedlnnerwlllbe .

poOuck and there will be a gift M·
change. It wu IIIIIOIIIIC:ed tbat lbe
January meetiDI will be held at lbe
ehurdl at 1:30 p.m. on Jan. a. AttendiDg were 14 memben and "
guMi,Mra.lllarieProbedAtotal,of
7llld: W lbuWn calli were made

duriniOctober. ·

~
~

,

Television
•
•
VIewmg

'I"h&amp; opinions and

"TiiE WAY IT

rcasmME·

v:iel.us of an ardent

~hly OO:ficated
o~oflife .. .

aro

..

•

EVENING
6:00 (}J U CD I!I CI Hlbl!Hl GI NEWS
ill RAINBOW FACTORY
C!J MoVIE ·(AOVENTURE) ''l'o
" Every Which Way But LOOie"
1979
I])
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
(j). ABC NEWS
CIJ® 3·2-1 CONTACT
6:30 Cii D CD NBC NEWS
CIJ THEDOOR
® BOB NEWHART SHOW
C1J FACE THE MUSIC
Ill C1J !liD CBS NEWS
ClJ WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
GlJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
fHlU) ABC NEWS
6:58 ill NEWS UPDATE
7:00 ill D PM MAGAZINE
ill NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
® ALLINTHEFAMILY
CIJfH) GI FAMILY FEUD
CD NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
liJCIJ TIC TAC DOUGH
® MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
!liD NEWS

"

i

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

i

~

I

COME HELP US
CELEBRATE
OUR 4TH ANNIVERSARY
NOVEMBER 17-32

0

·11-t 1
HE SAID THE MUSTACHS: KID'5
&amp;EI:N PRO!&gt;PSCTING M05T~Y
'-IORTHWJ;5T OF HERE ...

ANO IF I GIVE
MV HOR!&gt;E H15

HEAD, HE ' L~ JUH
NATU~ALLY FOLLOW

THS: 1&lt;10'5 TAAIL!

·OPEN 10 am-4 pm
SIGN UP NOW FOR DRAWINGS &amp; Pitltts.

CiD OVER EASY Guests: Actor and
entertainer Rudy Vallee arld Jane
Bryant Quinn, columnist and financial expert for Newsweek. Hosts :
Hugh Downs and Frank Blair.

.;' ..

stretching the truth in her re·
plies.(60
mins.)
(Closed·
Captioned; U.S.A.)
Cil ROCK CHURCH
ffi MOVIE ·(ROMANCE) "\Ia
"That Lucky Touch', 1975
@MOVIE -(MUSICAL)" \Ia "Fun

U:AVIH&lt;i? WHERE
ARE l'tE 601HG,

In Acapulco" 1963
CIJ!HJU) THAT'S INCREDIBLE
Ill C!J !liD FLO
CIJ(jj) GREAT PERFORMANCES:
DANCE IN AMERICA 'Ameritan
Dance Festival: Pilobo lus' This
program presents a performance
by the Pilobolus Dance Theatre ,
taped at the 1980American Dance
Festival and featuring the chorea·
graphy of founders Moses Pendle·
ton and Jonathan Wolken.

DON'T MISS OUR

8:30 Ill ill@) LADIES' MAN
8:5a CIJ NEWS UPDATE
9:00 CIJDCD MONDAY NIGHTATTHE
MOVIES 'The Diary Of Anne Frank'

For You
Do you own or operate a
small or medium-size
retail store, office, apart·
mentor church?
Then- you may qualify
for State Auto Mutual's .
SERIES ONE Business
Polley ... a modern-as·
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that combines an array of
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Let us ·explain the
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SERIES ONE ... the short
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could prove Interesting
and rewarding to you.
Just give us a call or
mail the handy coupon.
DALE C. WARNER ,.
INSURANCE

Stilt of Ohio, Dtpartment of Insurance. Cettffiutt of Complllnce - The
~

Silperinlend.en! of ll)$uranUJ of t11e SUtt ot Ohll. heri!by'
cmifl!s ltlll
.
•

UNIOfiiMICEM INSUIAHCE. CO

ol Olllu, Stitt Of TtUIS, hac com~litd wf1h 11\e 11M ~~ thiS State
tpOkabll 11 it 1nd s IU!horizlll Wnntlhe CUfrlllll rur !1 tra1151Ct In
tlril dMe Its IOPf'OCiriltt bustneU of ~t~S~.~rartte. Its fin•ncill tend~ is
....,_ by its tnlllial slttemen11D hiVe been •lolklwson t)ecembM Jl .
1911: Adfllinl(j tum. $110.732.129.00: llabiitiM, S9l.349,l66.00:

S..r.P1111, S1~49.337.00: l~«me. sSH25,457.00; E1lltllll~~~es.
SQ.2!9,261. Net usets. U7.382.163]1t. Capilli, $1,233.426.00

tw WITNESS EREtf, I Mve ll!feunto wblcribld rny n1me tnd
CIUI8d "''sui Ill be 1Hi•ed 11 ~~mbus. Otli:llhls d•r 1ndcU!e. Robert
J. RlkhfOfd Jr., S61pt. at lnsufii'ICe Ill Ohio.
(Sell ~

Sbte Dl Otio, Otplftm!nt of lnsur1nu. Certilicll! ol Compliance - lhe
UAdetsi&amp;nld. Su,erirllendent of !nmw:e of the Stltaot Ollio, .hereby
Oll'tfies !tilt

..,..bit

__.INQlON JU,TDW. tNSCO

o1 Efll'tSIItl. StU! of /linois, his CO!IIplied lrittlllle 111.-s of tus Stitt
to it 11M! is wlhot'iz.ed durint 1M curfllllt rmto trii\Sid in
8ri&amp; JtMI its IPPfOP'IIlf llusinessof II'ISIII.r!ai. lb ftrllllcill r.oncfifiM is
IIMI'Itl In b~nrml5111errrer111Dhll'ebeen as!oltrwson De&lt;tmbe131.
lt1t: Adll!iltclnwts. 19&amp;5.486.20.00; Litbilitia. $84&amp;144,614.00;
"''""' 19UM11lll0; · - I!GI,JJS,Sl&gt;DO; ...........
$l99.154...~4.00: N.t ~a~~ $117.14 1.6ll.OD; c.pw $25.036.8511.00

1

, IN Wlt"ESS wtt(Rf(f, lllve hereunkl ~ II'!Y 111111! lnd
CIMd """" • M llhld ltCDhMtblls, Clwo.lhisOftiltldcWt. Robert
1 ....... )~ S&amp;Ifl.fll...... rl(llo_
cs-71q

102

PIHH ren

BALL ABC Sports will provide live
coverage of the game between the
Oakland Aalders and the .Seattle
Sea hawks.

,,

ITENGLEj
.

rx

1

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as aug~·

I

geslod by the abova cartoon.

Print answer here:
Saturday's

I

.

r I I Jr I I

1)

(Anawars tomorrow)
Jumbles: FUDGE OFTEN PAYING STOOGE
.
Answer: What the oratorical whale was always
doing-SPOUTING OFF

Jumble Book No. 13,contllnlng 110puzzlts, lll-llllblelor $1 .75 poetplld
from Jumble, clothlsnewapaper, lo• 34, Norwood, N.J. 07848.1 ncfudeyour
n1me, eddrell, zip code 1nd m1kt ehec:kl p1y1ble to Ntwtplptrbooka.

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Fantastic duplicate luck
NORTH

how well they played the
hand."
Oswald' "The bidding in the
box shows a three-notrump
contract. How of ten was tt
reached?"
Alan: " Exactly twice .
Somehow or other, the South
players in this field were

11 ·17-80

tA1096 7
• Q 10 3
• 642

• 67
WEST

EAST
+J32
.A97 65
+A K 8 3

+ K 54
• J82
• J 10 9 5
+ 10 54

conservative.''
Oswald: ''I can see what

h~ppened . At both tables the
ace of hearts took the first
trick. One East played a hig~
diamond and took four quick
diamond tricks to set the
contract. The other East
underled his ace-king and
South rose with the queen to
romp off with eleven tricks
and a top score."
·
Alan : " Not quite , one
declarer did make five odd
that way. The other threenotrump bidder did even
better. East ducked the fi~
heart. South was in with the
king and proceeded to run his

+9

SOUTH
+Q6
.K4
• Q7
+AKQJ6 32

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
West

Pass
Pass

Norlb

Eas1

Soutb

Pass

1•

2+

2t
Pass

Pass
Pass

3 NT

seven clubs."

Oswald: "So the defenders
discarded badly and this South

made six?"
Alan: '~He was eVen luckier

By Oswald Jacoby

and Alan Sontag ·
Alan: "Here is a classic

Seoul on a two-day pasa, Hawk eve
is ambushed and ca ptured by a
soldier.
North
Korean
(Season-Flremiere)

example of luck in duplicate
bridge.• Most Souths played
the band in a club part-score
contract, making either nine
or ten tricks depending on

(]) ISAMU NOGUCHI Thla program

than that. Both East and West
chucked spades. This declarer
made all tltirteen tricks."
Oswald: "In other words,
the two declarers who should
have been set made six over-

tricks between them."

[NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

@ ?10 14&amp;??14 14·\0??WNET

MOVIE ·(COMEDY) '"l'o
" Ju1tYouAnd M1, Kid" 1979
0 CIJ@) HOUSE CALLS Dr. Mi·
chae ls goes to jail rather than
violate the doctor-patient relationship by giving medical reco~ds to a
Senate Investigating committee.
(Season-Premiere)
10:00 (]) TBS EVENING NEWS
liiCIJ(j)) LOU GRANT Aftorronling
his house to a strange acting couple, Charlie Hume gets suspicious
when neighbors report mysterious
Q.2:1ngs-on. (60 mlns.)
[j) FREE VOICE OF LABOR:
JEWISH ANARCHISTS Employing
interviews to highlight th'eir lasting
commitment to their ldeala. this
documentary (efls 1ne story of
Jewish anarchists who came here
lromEuropein the early 1900's. (60
!llins.)
®NEWS
10:28 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
1D,30 Cil RISE AND BE HEALED
GlJ OPEN MIND
10:58 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
11:00 illDCDI!ICII!liD NEWS
ill FESTIVAL OF PRAISE
C!J MOVIE ~DRAMA)" "Hido In
Ploln Sight" 1GBO
(]) NIGHT GALLERY
CIJ MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING
.
CIRCUS
GlJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
11:28 ill NEWS UPDATE
11:30 CllDCD THE TONIGHT SHOW
'Best of Carson' Guests: Suzanne
Pteahette, Or. Carl Sagan, Doug
Henning. (Repeat; eo min a.)
(J) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
([)MOVIE-(DRAMA)•••y. "Non•
But Tho Lonol, Heort" '11143
. I!J(J) CBS LATE MOVIE 'QUINCY
M.E.: No Deadly Secret' Stars:
Jack Klugman , Garry Walberg.
Quincy tries to save a friend from
death but fails. The morning after
the autopsy. Quincy flndatheman'a
bod)l and medical evidence has
disappeared, plus, the man he 11up·
poaedly performed the autopey on
is still alive ~ (Repelit) 'THE NEW
AVENGERS : Tho Midas Touch'
Stars : Patrick Macnee, Joanna
Lumley. (Repeat)
(l) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
!liD MOVIE ·(DRAMA) •• "Thlo
. Pro~.:t 11 Condem-ned" 1M6
11:45 CIJ1.12JOJ NEWS
12: 15 CIJ iHl OJ
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
12:30 CIJDCD TOMORROWGuooi:Dr.
Cart Coppolino, the anaeethe·
aiologiat convicted of killing his
wife by InjeCtion of a lethal doee ot
t drugs. (90 mins.)
..
C1J MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE) "lio
9:30

•
:t•M Ac.GU)EN-r•
~ONE AND %
WANT YoU ,.o
FINO OIJ"r WHY.
8ALDY.'

..

MR. MERCHANT PLAN NOW TO BE A
PART OF THIS BIG ANNUAL EDITIOI.
.
OUR SALES REPRESENTATIVE Will BE CAlliNG ON YC)U
SOON. IF FOR SOME REASON WE MISS YOU. • •
PLEASE CALL US! DEADLINE FOR All COPY IS
. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 23rd.

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11-u::y WON'r
1.-iNE UP
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l BARNEY
AUNT LOWEE'ZV I

WHAT IN THUNDER
IS GRAVITV?

BUT IT HOLDS

I HEERED
THAT!!

SOME FOLKS
DOWN
MORE'N
OTHERS

The Daily Sentinel

tit! !~~~~~---..,...

,---------~

THIS WAI(, 51L

me mor.o · - the

, __.........,_____

1 ~INK
I(OU'RE

PHONE

·

RI6HT, ·

MARCIE ...

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!,

l!I~J•"•rby THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Run-down;
1 Like a
shabby ·
pussycat
tO Sharpen
5 AnthropoDOWN
morphic
I Basic rule
10 Zounds!
2 Nimble
11 Scold
3 Fooling
12 Anti-missile
around
4 Dutch city
missile
13 Fester
5 Intoxicating
14 Man's name 6 Vessels
IS "The -,"
7 Play a joke on
LeRoy fiim 8 Minimally
16 Denary
9 Sewing
17 "Have we
and darning
- choice?" 11 Trade name
18 - de tete 15 Outlaws
19 Strengthen · 20 "Deep 21 Bacteriol~
Dream"
gist's wire
(1938 song)
22" . .. bythe- .
early light"
24 Roles
25 Turkish
weight
26 Feline
sound
27 Late "Barney

28 Count

up

need
22 Squaredancing
pattern

30 Chicago

airport
31 French

23M~ood

painter

21 Undersized 33 Sign of ,
26 Ancient

spoilage·
36 Freshness
symbol

(comb.
fonn)

c~star

28Hue
29- Kippur
32 Peculiarity
34 Popular
Kern song
35 Type of
antenna
36 Trumpet call
37 Verdi opera ·
38 To be (Fr.)

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDi.BAAXIl
II

'

LONGFELLOW

One letter aimp)y atandl for another, In this umple A' Ia
UJed for the three L'a, X for the two O'a, etc. Sinale letters.
apootrophea, the lenath and formation of the worda are all
hints. Each d~ the code !etten are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

1:30 (I) D. JAMES KENNEDY
1:16 fHl.NEWS
1:56 (I) MOVIE ·(DRAMA)
"~twMn Two Wortdt" 1~
t-...---;~ r-...-::~--11 2:00 CD NEWS
'
@I BELIEVE
2:28 (I) SPORTS REPORT
2:30 ill ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
3:118 (I) SPORTS REPORT
4:00 ill 700CLUB
~-"'"I 4:20 (I) RAT PATROL
11:30 (I) WOIIO&amp; OF HOPE

••11o

,CD SPOIITS·UPDAn

21 Punting

Miller"

CIJ SPORTS
REPORT
.-----------11 12:118
1:00 (I)
TRANSFORMED

1:11

--."!"'-~-

C!J

"Every Which WIW But Loo•"
11179
12:16 ()) . CAIIOL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
(j)). BIG VALLEY

WE'LL ~ FINO I-IlM

---·--·-·-··1

'

I liD

I!ICil!liD M.A.S.H. \Yhllodrlvlngto

preeltflts an eJCamination of the lite
ot renowned J.apan8ee ICulptor
laamu Noguchi as he travels the
world to create his art: (60 mine.)

STATE
AUTOMOBILE
MUTUAL
INSURANCE
COMPANY

:............._
.,.._,,.._.....
•

I~DIC:ATE.S ·

P06SIBII.. I"TIES
OF CO~ISUM I NcS
II.JTER'E;ST.

700CLUB
CIJfH)U) MONDAY NIGHT FOOT-

SIRlES ONE 8uslness l'ottcy.

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w. Main 992·2143 Pomeroy, o.

Representing

I

1980 Stars : Melissa Gilbert, Max·
imilian Schell.

'

tnsjtJralrtce Package

DIMPOU

that a he is a paraplegic who is also

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26th

""~~us
$6,191 ,795.110; lneolllt, Pl,919..t~~JIO:I· Upetulrtum.
$12.
&amp;tl.OO: IR! assets. 116.191,195.00: ytN, lQOO!lOOO.OO
IH W SS WH[Rf.CJ, I have hereunto !Ubsaibed 111y Nine and
Cllll8d mysetlkl be 1ff111ed It Columbus, Oluo, lhsd1~ and d1t1. Robert
J. lhtcl'lfont .II., ~If- allftSIIIIIIU Ill (JMo.
lSuf 48~

1-THEFY

a pen pal in a distant city, unaware

•

1919: Mmil!ed 1sset1, S7&amp;.!MS,ll5.00; U•biWies. S60.7SJ.l\9.00:

four ordinary words.

learns the joy of love and the pain ot
lies when he brags about himself to

lWreslunents were served by Roy
and Opal Grueser, Ethel Grueser,
and Lucille Leifheit.

of Wihnmrtoo. Sbte~_Ddawtre, hnCOII'Iplied •ith tllelhrsof lh.s Shit
appklble It It 11111 • autllaMid ckuinc the ameflt yeu to tnnstet1n
tM sttte•ls~PJWG!lllllt btWnmol ~rarw:a. Its f111anciltcondffion ll
.,_, ~ illlftl'lu1l dltement to line been • lojm on December 31.

Unscramble these four Jumt:M.s,

(}]8 BUUSEYE
ill WORDS OF HOPE

® SANFORD AND SON
CIJI!I CiJ JOKER 'S WILD
ClJ !liD HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
ClJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
GlJ MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
il}J Gl FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
• 8:00 ill D CD LITTLEHOUSEONTHE
PRAIRIE Young Albert Ingalls

The program presented by Mrs.
Ethel Grueser included "The
Ragged Old Flag" by William Radford; "Laundry Advice" by Pat
Holter; and "Traffic Safety" by
()pan Grueser. A discussion was
held by the lecturer on the types of
programs for next year.

Stilt of Ohill, Department cf l~sur1na . Ctrtilicltl: ct ComD1i1nce - T~t
~Mt~Jtnit:l'led. Superinten&lt;ltnl of lnsuruu of tilt State Gl Ohic, here~
ctrtllits IIlii
NIAGARA nil£ INS CO

THATSCf!AIIeLEOWORDCWIE
by Henri Amolllll'ld Bob Lee

one lener to eacrt square, to form

lCiosed-Captioned; U.S .A.)

7:30

TO KEEP YOUR CHRISTMAS SPIRITS

A contribution was made to the
Ohio Lung Association. A communication was read from Jaines
Ross, state master, and reported ill
were Leona Lieving and Betty
Conkle. Sympathy was extended to
Wilmetta
Leifheit,
and
congrutulations to Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Massie.

li'fl~N'} ~~ - ~

~ ~ ~~ .

NOV. 17, 1980

i
:i

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'

was announced for Monday, Nov. 24,
7:30 p.m. at the Rock Springs
Grange hall. At the next meeting,
Dec. 11, there will be a Christmas
potluck at 6: 30 p.m. with a white
elephant gift exchange.

Meetings on
family violence
scheduled today

Ule uppennost point, with others

at the end of each crossbar to fullill
the potential of individuals for
wholeness.
.
.
.
Mrs. Roush read the 'I'hank!lglvlng
story which told of the history and
origin of the holiday. She reealled
that Thanksgiving has been called

ln$talled were ··Ruth Karr,
Carlotta Boyer, Phyllis McDaniel, president; Helen Wolf, vice
Doug Huff, Sherry Hoffman, Vivian president; Betty Lue Moore,
Fry, Senate of W. Va., Deborah secretary; Kathryn Windon;
Zuspan, Helen Penney, the Aleksic treasurer; Betty Roush, assistant
family, Mrs. C. H. Taylor, Karen secretary; Marilyn Spencer,
Cook, Ferris Justis, Taylor assistant treasurer; Kathryn Baum,
Publishing Company, Terri Grover, secretary of program ~ources;
Randy Lavender, W. Va. Fuel and Altona Karr, Christian personhood;
Energy Office, Mason County Public Bertha ~th, supportive comlibrary, Betty Lake, Mary Thabet, munity; Ethel Orr, Christian social
Mildred Ungerfelt, Lucille Gibbll, involvement; Jean ~oush, Christian
Janet McDennitt, Jana Burson, global concerns; Daylene Bahr,
Kathy Gibbs, Gordon Young, Ethel Orr, Kathryn Mora, Mildred
Animal Welfare Institute, Bllli'y
Gaul and Evan Hollon, committee
Haynes, Sherry Hawkins, John Van- on nominations. Esther Mays and
Meter, Jackie Wolf, Christl Staats, Bernice Bailey, membership;
Gloria Smith, Grace Brown, Depart- Elizabeth Hayes, public relations
ment of Culture and History, Gary and historian.
Gibbs, Janet Reed, Roberta Ross,
Mrs. Bernice Bailey opened the
Sue Schwarz, Terry Mlchaej, Tbe
program
with a reading, "The 'You'
Cabell County Public library, Tbe
in
United
Methodist Women" and a
Refundle Bundle of N. Y., and last on
Christian
perspective.
Scripture was
the list but not least, who are always
taken
mm
John
4,
verses
7 to 16,
ready to help when called upon for
and read by Mrs. Betty Toudh. The
the odd jobll are Richard Varian and
group read a litany on "Wholeness"
Larry Montgomery.
There was alao a donation of soine followed by comments on the worcollege bulletin catalogs, but the . ship center which featured the cross,
person dido's leave their name. U a perfect symbol as the meaning of
"wholeness." It was noted that r..oo
their name isn't on this list they can
call, and It will put on the upcoming
list.
If any other names were omitted
please telephone ljS at TJ3.S580.

MASON - Joan Verian and
Earlene Bumgardner of the Muon
ctty Public library would like to
take thla opportunity to thank all
thoee maldng donations of books,
money and volWlleerlng their serVices to the library dllrill&amp; the past
year. Some people have donated
· more than one time, but their name
will only be llated OQCe.
Cheryl _Lake, Barbara Zu9pan,
$andra Hoffman, Sus! Michael, Bernice Dudley, Gerald Fields, West
Virginia Library Commission Gifts
and Exchange ProgJ'!UII, Lola Jeffers, BUlle Jean Dawson, Karen
Reitmire, Duane Johnson, Connie
Gray, Todd ZuSpan, Jayne Varian,
State Department of Education,
Ruth Greene, Nora Young, Mary
Stanley, Doug Robie, Bunny Estes,
Department of Natural Reso.urces,
Pam Hurlow, Bonnie and George
McFarland, Stanley Cook, Lorraine
McCauley, Emily Bwngardner,
Mike Russell, Diane Johnson, Linda
Zuspan, Marie Smith, James
Morgan, Lisa Lawhom; Becky Reitmire, Dee Bond, David Varian,
Regina Rayburn, District Teaching
Committee of the Bahai 's, Melissa
Dawn McDaniel, Evelyn Proffitt,
Greg Bonecutter, Katherine Ent,
Peggy McDaniel, Margaret Dotson,

-

7-1be Dlll7 Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Nov. 17, 1980

Chester UMW meets recendy' installs
officers
.

·Mason Library
thanks helpers

___,__._

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Yat day'e Ct;pt ...&amp;11: A SENSE 01' HUMOR Will..
YOtJk TI\OUBLES TO mE1R PROPER
PROPORTIONS.-SOURCE UNKNOWN

REDUCE

.,

�-

•

$-The DallySeotinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Nov.l7,1980

•

Birthday fore honors Mrs. Hatfield
Mrs. Ethel Hatfield of Middleport

Milburn · (Linda ), Chris, Lisa,
Michelle, Mike, Jeri Lynn and Susie
Byers, Gahanna; Mrs . .Ann Collins, •
Grove City; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Richmond, Mr. and Mrs.· Jeff Fitz·
patrick, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Nonnan Starr (Irene) and Drew,
Cleveland; Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Clark, Metamora, Mich.; Mr. and
Mrs. Wallace Hatfield, Angela, Barbara and Wally, local; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Jeffers (Nancy), Sean and
Valerie, local ; Mr. and Mrs. Courtney Campbell and Jan, Sardinia ;
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Campbell,
Kim, Kelly, Kettering ; Marvin Campbell and Heather, D;~yton ; Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Hendricks, Doug, Davis
and Missy, Kettering ; Mr. and Mrs.

was surprised on her 74th birthday
by family members and friends .
They honored her at a dnner party
held at the Holiday Inn. The guest
list included her seven children and
their fllltlilies, two brothers, their
wives and families, and long-time
friends.
Mrs. Hatfield's chldren entertained the gathering with a
program ci " remember when ?,"
recalling many favorite stories and
events in her life.
Attending were John Hatfield,
Fort Myers, Fla.; Mr: and Mrs. J . B.
Hatfield, Joey and Julie, Jacksonville, N. C.; Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie

Helen Help

Dexter Campbell, Mount Sterling,
Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Howell
and Stuart,· Paris, Ky.; Mrs. Lib
Dowell, Karen Boni, Jacksonville,
N. C.; Mrs. Lucille Schwarz, Mason,
W. Va.; Mrs. Janet Pierce, Randy,
Mason, W. Va,; Mrs. Gloria Johnson, Gina, Tahnee, and Brady,
Rutland ; Mrs. Geneva Shumate,
Rutland; Mr. .and Mrs. Dan
Stidham, Galllpolis; Mr. and Mrs.
M. D. Miller and Mary, Pomeroy;·
Mr. and Mrs. William Kennedy,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Baker, Shawn and Matt; Mrs. Alice
Robeson, Mrs. Pat Parson, Mrs.
Nora Rice, Middleport, and the
honored gu~st. Pictures were taken
during the celebration . .

Polly's Pointers
'

'

House-training problem

Book schedule for Monday, Nov.
17 - Carpenter, Laura's Store; 2:~
3:10 p.m.; Dexter, Church, 3 : ~
4:10; Danville, Churcl!, 4:50,5 :15;
Rutland, Bank One, 5 : ~ : 35 (short
film at 6:15); Rutland, Depot Street,
6:4d-7:25 (short lilm at 7); Bradbury, Red Barn, 7 : ~:05.
Tuesday, Nov. 18- Portland, Post
Office, 2:40-3:10 p.m.; Success Rd.,
Near 39060, 3:45-4 :15; Reedsville,
Reed's Store, 4 : ~:45 (short film at
5); Tuppers Plains, Arbaugh
Housing, 6: 1f&gt;-7 (short film at 6:30 );
RockSprings Church, 7:3S-6 :05.
Thursday, Nov. 20 - Coolville,
Post Office, 9:~10:15 a.m.; Ar·
cadis Nlii'Sing Home, 10 : ~11; Tuppers Plaills, Lodwick's Market,
11:30 a.m.-12 noon; Senior Citizens
Center, 12:5().1:20 p.m.; Mulberry
Heights Infinnary, 1:25-2:10; Antiquity, Antique , Store, 2:50-3:20;
Letart Falls, Effie's Restaurant,
3:35-4:20 (short film at 5); Racine,
Wagner's Hardware, 5:30-6 :15
(short filn) at 5:45) ; Syracuse, Pool,
6:30-7:45 (short film at 7).
Drop by your nearest bookmobile
stop for free entertainment and in·
formation. The bookmobile has
paperbacks, 45 and lp records,
magazines, large-Prtn! books, and
how-to-do-it help for everything
from car repair to di~.
Please remember to return those
forgotten books and ecords. No fines
will be charges for overdue. The
bookmobile needs them back so that
someone else can have a chance to
use them.

By PoUy Cramer
the reader who wanted to know how
Special correspondent
to clean the yellowed lace on her
DEAR POLLY - Is there daughter's doll clothes. I, too, have a
anything that can be done for the very large doll collection and cannot
stains and smell after dogs and cats help her with removing that yellow
have urinated on a carpet? - KYM· but can tell her how to prevent it in
BERLY
the first place. I keep all of my dolis
DEAR KYM·
in plastic bags so there is no dusting
BERLY - Club
or washing of clothes. When the bags
sOda helps if used
get dirty-looking I simply change
soon after the acthem. I use plastic dry cleaning bags
cident occurs.
for the large dolls and find those
One authority on
with a crinkly design work best for
rug cleaning
my small ones. - NADEANE
suggests covering
DEAR POLLY- When growing
the stained area
plants in a glass container filled with
with as much as
water an awful, filmy , white scum
one-half inch of
coats the inside of the glass. To
table salt.
Cramer
remove this I use equal parts of that
Tamara Grate
aimost
pure soap dishwashing liquid
Leave this on for a day or two and
and
ammonia,
but if the container is
then remove with the vacuwri. Be
very
large
I
dilute
this with water.
sure to empty the vacuum iJn.
mediately and wipe off any parts Let is soak and then a bottle brush
·
that have come in contact with the will scrub it clean.
When I · pop corn in the oldsalt. This, too, is especially recomfashioned
way in a deep pan on top of
mended for fresh spots after the ex·
the
stove
I
put a paper towel under
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Grate, New cess moisture has been wiped up. the
lid
(between
pot and lid) and this
POLLY
Haven, entertained recently with a
keeps
the
oil
from
spattering when
DEAR POLLY - Most people
party honoring their daughter,
the
corn
starts
popping.
-JEAN
Tamara Nicole, on her second bir- have a bottle of rubbing ~coho! in
Public Notice
Polly
will
send
you
one of her
the medicine chest and I find it one
thday.
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
A Mickey Mouse theme was of the best things to use for cleaning
NOTICE OF SALE
clippers if she uses your favorite
By v irtue of an Order of
carried out in the cake and every bit of the film off eye glasses.
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
Sale issued out of the com
decorations. Attending were her - WILHELMINA.
mon Pleas Court of Meigs
column. Write POLLY'S POIN- County,
Ohio, in the ca$e of
DEAR POLLY - 1 am answering
brother, Aaron Matthew, Mr. and
TERS in care of this newspaper.
First Federal Savings and
Mrs. Herman Grate, Mr. and Mrs.
Loan Association, Parker·
sburg
West Virginia,
T. J. Ferrell. Sending gifts and cards
Plaintiff. aga inst Clyde J.
were Mrs. Lois Gibbs, Mr. and Mrs.
Morlan, et al., Defendants.
upen a judgment therein
Otis Hesson, Mr. and Mrs. James
rendered, being CaSe No.
George, Chris, Jodi, Jamie, Mr. and
17574 in said Court, ! will of·
fer for sale, at the front
Mrs. Mike Nicholson, Ryan and
door of the courthouse in
Bridget, Mr. and Mrs. Terry SchupPomeroy, Meigs County,
Ohio, on the 13th day of
bach, Staci, Jeni, and Jana.
December, 1980. at 10 ·00

Us

Business Services

This convict claims not
all convicts con artists

KAUFPS

BY HELEN IIOTl'EL
Molt people need a rea1011 to
ehange, and tMt means. 1mowing
~lal COI'J'SpGIIdeat
DEARHELEN:
.
10111eone who cares. All we're uking
You've had III!Veral letters from Ia that people on the outalde keep
people who W8l'!l againlt prilon pea· communicating with 111. Not an cons
pals. Ju.st beeaue ~~me priloners are looting for euy marks- - 1HE
are con artists, pleae d&lt;ll't luinp 111 OTHER SIDE, FROM CELL
all together.
,
BLOCK A
Society puts us away, and than
DEAR HELEN:
wants to forget about UB. Sure, we
You've had a lot lUibvtetsY
made mistakes and we have to 11\'e
about
cost.of-Uvlng ralaes in Social
with them, but we still need contact
Security
paymenta. I think people
with the outside. We need letters to
mila
the
point.
'
supply moral support and mental
lllnow
a
man
who
Ia
indepndenUy
strength.
wealthy, yet wbeil be ret4-ed, he
Some guys in here haven't bad a
ltarted
drawing lame
a IIIDIIth
letter or vlsit!ll' in ;years. ·r·m lucky
which
be
cldn't
need.
Others
in a way: l've only been here three
months - all I have 11 four years ltnlgg!e to IUI'VIve on POO or less a
and nine months to go. I'r:! '11 and get ' 'month becauae they couldn't plan
lhead on their inadequate salaries.
my old man to come down here cnce
I think Social Security should be
a month for a 1o-minute visit. I doo't ;
know anyone elae that would con- bued on need, rather than having It
milked for the benefit of many· who
tin~ aa friends with a con, so I write
different companies for brochures have already made their pDe. JOHN
and junk mall to keep me occupied.
DEARJOHN:
.
It's a whole other world in jail and .
You
forget:
Social
Security
Ia inIt ecares the hell out of a first-timer:
surance,
not.
a
.dole.
How
would
you
!doing the aame things day after day,
Uke
to
contribUte
some
$1,000
per
having no righta or privileges,
year
for
40
y~,
than
get
nothing
sharing a razor once a week with 30 ·
other guys, no rea~ materiala a:· bact becauae you · aren't "poor
cept a weeklf newspapet which you follla"? - l i
also share: (It's a small COW!ty jall
- I'll be moved soon.) If you're
lucky you get to go outside for an
hour every three weeks. I almoa
forgot : there are 14 guys to a cell
block. Cozy!

41

TWO BEDROOM un·
furnished house, also twd

bedroom furnished &amp; onQ!

bedroom ·furnished apart·

992·2288.
Four laxlly garage sale,
November 18th·19th from 9·
at Morning Star. Follow
signs. five

Torres speaks
to HRC here
Ms. Norma Torres, nursing supervisor of the Meigs County Health
Department, was guest speaker at
the r~ent meeting of the Meigs
Hwnan Resource Council held at the
Meigs Inn. ·
She explained the services
available at the Meigs County
Health Department and advised that
they are free to , Meigs County
residents with donations being taken
to help pay for supplies.
Among the services which she
mentioned were the free im·
munizations and shots, orthopedic
clinic,
pediatric,
otological
diagnostic clinic, diagnostic
ophthalmologlcal pediatric clinic,
plastic, cardiac and well-child
clinic, high blood pressure
programs, venereal disease
programs, and the Bureau of Crippled Children's Services of Ohio.
Ms. Torres will also be the speaker
at the Tuesday meeting to be held at
the Meigs Inn, 12 noon. Mrs. Ellen
Ball presented the treaurer's report
which indicated a balance of $164.03.

The order of the rose degree was but was not present. Each received a
given to Ruby Baer, Jean Werry, · yellow rose and a silver circle
Jane Walton, and Margaret FollrOd charm.
at the preferential tea held at the
The aru1ual Christmas party for
home of Mrs. Margaret Follrod.
husbands and guests was announced
Janet Hill, vice president, con- for Dec. 6 at 8 p.m. at the home of
ducted the ceremony with aU mem- Mrs. Ann Rupe. Next meeting of the
bers participating in the rituaL
chapter will be on Dec. 11 at the
Those receiving the order were Riverboat Room with Mrs. Van
presented certificates for 15 years Vranken and Mrs. Rose Sisson as
active chapter participation, gold hostesses. The Preceptor Chapter
rose pins, and a yellow rose.
will receive the laureate degree at
Ann Rupe presented the silver clr· the spring founder's day program.
cle ritual for 25 years membership to The degree is the highest of Beta
Roberta O'Brien, Jean Werry,
Sigma Phi.
Mary Morris. June Van Vranken is
Mrs. Norma Custer presided at
eligible for the silver circle ritual. the silver coffee service.

and

Social
Calendar

A Thanksgiving theme was
carried out at the Athens Mental
Health Center party hosted for 45
residents by members of the
Homebuilders Class of the Mid·
dleport Church of Christ.
Games were played with gifts
going to each resident. There was
group hymn singing led by Mrs.
Clyda Allensworth with Mrs. Alice
Robeson at the piano. Ed. Evans led
the prayer.
· Ice cream, potato chips, cupcakes,
candy, bananas, and Kool-Aid were
served. Larry Lankus, director of
volunteer services, showed colored
slides of the hospital and of the
Homebuilders parties held there.
Going to Athens for the party
besides those riamed were Edna
Evans, .Dee Hartinger and Nora
Rice.
SHOWER NOV. 24
There will be a bridal shower for
Barbara Badgley, financee of Allen
Swartz, on Nov. 24 at 7:30p.m. at the
Modern Woodmen hall in
Burlingham. Janice Haynes and
Mildred Zeigler will host the shower.
~ ,)

.

I

described in Plat Book No.
Pages 58 and 59, Meigs
County Plat Records, sub·
to tne building restric·
l·ect
ions as contained In said
Plat Record.
Deed Reference: Being
part of the real estate
descnbed In Volume 250,
Page 151, Meigs County
Deed Records.
PARCEL NO.2 :
Also the following

pelnt In the grantors
southeast property corner;
thence wesl along the gran·
tors sou1h property line. 792

degrees 43' 29" west along

4,

:7=::=:::::::;=:=::;::::.===

pet 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64,

45

work

•
-Concrete work

TRY US!

Furnished Rooms

selec·
personalized

iii

wide

Christmas gifts. . And
Christmas stockings,

- Plumbing and

Complete Dry Cleaning
and Laundry
ecarpet
• Draperies
• Furniture
c"We're No . 1 in
Service &amp; Quali

Shop

We offer
tion of

shirts,

electrical work

hats ,

and

Roofs, Guttils,.
&amp; Siding

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

~I ., (

RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Racine Gun Club, every
Friday night starting a1
7:30 p.m. Factory choke
guns only.

.r

I Auctttfl
9-ll'&amp;ated to 811)'

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

sl-Housetto141 GMCb
n-ca~,_.rv, lltadlolqyl,ment ·
Sl-Afttlquet
•
S4-Mitc. MtrcfiiiMiilo
U-lulkl(nt SultPII"
H-Peh far Sale

,,_Help wanted
l:l:_SituatMI Wantlld
ll-lnsuruc:T
14-lutbtess Trelnlng
15-School• lfl•tructlon

16--

RHio,TV
ICIA ....Ir
11-Wan• To De

o,orn,.,.,

72-Truc:lta fw s.te
6l-LIIftlltecll
.,_Hay &amp; Grlln ·

21- 811Stftftl

2~teLMn

Sonricn

.··· '
eREAL ESTA-TE
JJ-J"erms for late
M-luslneu lvlkllnes

25.-----:-:---S
\-_
-_
-_
-_
27. _;),
_
_
·- - - - - - - - 26.
6. - - - - - - - 28
-_
-_
-_
-•:_
..._
7
29..;.__
__
_
· - - - - - - - - - 30. _ _ _ __
8·-------:---~
9.
_________
31.._ _ __...__ __
32. _ _ _ _ _ __
10. '

·,

u Motacwcln
75-

.........rtc

l

.•

·I
'

........
..........., .
~~~

-·-·1
u-.,,•.,......

JJ ._ _ _-::-_;_-

.

34. _ _ _ _.;,,_ __
35. -~---~- ·i

•

~h-1~6.

~

'.

.......... M. I . . .Ir

.

•••

3,11

1.
I,
2.
J.

'

t

•

"'•
••e• W.nl over ttte minimum IS won11 11 c nnh,.,..,.,... ...,..
Ads"""''"' oiMr tMn C.lecvtlve tllyt .,,, .. dalrtM at "-1

-c:
.,..,

,....

.'
'
lit memery, can ef TIIIMt HI a.ftuclry1 'C.h Mt ....... U. I

.............
...................,..........
-·
..,.,
RIIPI. 6.C..Ia.n1Me.

t

~

- · . - - ..................
· - · · C..tl .

·:

~----------------~~~

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW : Horses

and ponies and riding
lessons.
Everyth i
imaginable in horse

ditioning. Call

boots, etc. English

menl. Blankets,

or

Western. Ru1h
(614) 698·3290.

Real Estate- General

,.":,:----;1-::n:-:su=r::a:::n-=ce=---'--

Reeves

Put a cold nose in your
future!! Shots, wormed ,
Meigs Countv Humane

REALTY
742-2003
GeorgeS. Hobst.:tter Jr.

Broker

NEW LISTING
COUNTRY CHARM ~
101f• acreswfth beautlufl
brick
home,
3
bedrooms, living room
accented with stone

fireplace, dining room,

equipped kitchen, 2
baths, full basement

with fireplace, double

garage; overloo~lng 11;,
acre pend, stocked with
bass &amp; channel catfish.
Call for appt.
ACREAGE - 7.2 acres
on Hysell Run Rd .. with
2 bedroom home. Land
Is half cleared, rest
woods. $19,000.00.
MINl·FARM- C~ster
- 6 acres with nice 3
bedroom home, llv/Qg
room,

garage

13

lXMNINGatii.DS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE
FOR -ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS.
CALLUS. .

992-2342
opwNINGCHlDS AGENCY, INC.

dining

room,

modern kitchen, bath,
,.nd

several

._bldgs. ONLY
m.ooo.oo.
VERY SPACIOUS .,- 2
•toraQ~

Home,full3
2 baths,
1~~-~=;;~B:r~:ick
LAND CONTRACT - 3
$26,500.00.

bedroom home, living
room with fireplace,
dining room, kitchen,
bath, full basement on
large lot. Asking
$27,000.00.
lffl WINDSOR HOME .
-Fully furniShed wlth3
bedrooms, 2 baths,
large liVIng room, kit·
chen with microwave,
on 2 level acres, lust off
Rt. 124. 129,500.00.
Cheryl Ltmley, Assoc.
Phone 741·3171
Velma Nlclnlky, Assoc.
Phone 742·3CW2

\

NEW -LISTING - 13 ·
acres of wooded land on
Forked RUn Road.
available.
Utilities
$8,000.
NEW LISTING - 90
acre$ of wooded ·land
wl1h mineral rights.
$27,000.
.
NEW LISTING- Small
house on ~ lots in
Pomeroy. House to fix
up or remove for trailer
site. Cl1y uti Iilies.
$4,000.
FOR ACTIVE LIVING
- Approx. 5 acres with 4
bedrooms, house com·.
ple1ely
remodeled,
carpeted, equipped kit·
chen, basement . $45,000.

PEARL OF LITTLE
PRICE - lN MIDDLEPORT - ThiS 3·4'

bedroom

home

has

much to offer a family,

Nice kitchen with range,

dining room, full base·
ment on a large level lot
50'x200'. Aluminum
siding. $26,900.
SIZE THIS ONE UPl
APPLE GROVE' Over 13 acres with 3
possible building sites
with road frontage and a
2 bedroom home that
needs

some

work .

$11,200.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
"Hlfl

. ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell "'·2660
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
"2·U92
OFFICE 992-2259 ·

m

Blue Up
Gold
Rust
cas~ and
carry

MAIN ST .

Pomeroy

ranch brick home in Baum
985 ·381~

Rust
Apricot
lnstalletl
Reg. $15.95

RUTLAND FURNITURE

50

utilities. 992-7727.

Shephards,

beagle,

742·2211

................... .

. . . .... ,

o •o •o

I "

"

81

Home
Improvements

GENE'S
CARPET
CLEANING. Deep stream
clean puts nu·look back 1n
your carpet, highly recom·
eluding, air cond.Jtlonin.g, mended, reaSonable rates,
Free
power brakes,
power scotchguard .
steering, am·fm stereo estimates. Gene Smilh, call
cassette tape deck, 21.000 now 992·6309 or 742·2211 .
71
Autos lor S'ille
1979 CHEVY MONZ"A, still
under warranty, loaded, in·

actual miles, in excellent
condition, only one owner. , Need
help
with
Great Buy!!! Phone 992· . redecorating? Rearrangln·

3110 atler 5 p.m. Just like a g? Picking out wallpaper,
brand

new

cheaper! I

cltr

only

four

paint,

furniture

&amp;

ac·

cessorles? Call Becky al
949·2534 tor 'Country S1yle
Subtle Hints.'

1978 TRANS AM. Must sell,
special chocolate colored, many extras. 992·5689 or
lovable dog, if you like 742·2516.
chocolate &amp; vanilla sun· ·
Excavating
13
daes, she's sweet, she
1969
CHEVELLE
SS,
396, 3 J &amp; F BACKHOE SER·
barks, with a g~eat per· speed, pesi trac ;_ Needs
VICE liscensed &amp; bonded,
sonality, You'll love this work.
$200. 992·7549.
septic tank lnstalla1ion,
992·6260.
Labradors,

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH?
DOYOUHAVETHECOVERAGE?

•••
1..

E. Main St.

chen, family room, several
' bedrooms, garage . Low

four

.......... UMtr

. . cl

acre lo1, Syracuse. Many
extras, plus modern kit·

Kerr, tri· colored

NG SOUlHEASTERII OHIO SINCE

' .,.

lo----------~---~--·-···-·-·--·.1:11

l

Price reduced on lovely,

Society, 992·6260, between
the hours of 12·7, closed
Tuesdays. Black &amp; tan

Rates alldOtber Information
. . ..,
,...,.
, . . .,.

15. . . . . , , - - - - - - ______________

-.

u .....,..........

17-u,.._..... ,

......

•,

':t

...........tklft

I.

community Church, Long
Bottom,Oh.

I

~

.,_ .............. &amp; ••, • .,._

.

Deer Slug shoo11ng match,
Sunday, !p.m. at the lzaak
Walton Farm.

,·

•

11-HomelmiM'WMtlltt

21J0 I'.M. .., .... .,

I

I

"
GHOST ReVival.
'' HOLY
Nov. 16·22. Mount Olive

&amp;.tc:c'"..-..s

W•nt·Ad AdVtl'flllnt
Deadlines

THE TIME has come for
believers in Jesus Christ to
unite in preparation for His
return. Join us In preparing
the bodY of Christ for thai
day. Write: Millennium
Minls1rles,
Box 353,
Newark Ohio ~55.

I

17-Auto ,..,..,

eSERVICES

•·

O
l

POMEROY
lli!ILANDMARK

spat:: ious home on wooded

Blue

Froms

DRIVE A LITTLE- SAVE A LOT

~._;

turtle

·.·

s...

71-A . . . . .
1s-vana 14 W.D.

31-Lota&amp;Acreaee
3._R.. IIIIa.. WafltM
3'1-Jteatton

4, - . - - - - - - - -

:;

e TRANSPORTATION·

. ,., ..,,!JJ

3• - - - - - - - -

,.

,,__._. ~ ~yttu ...

21--.P•elcldllftal

24. _ _ _ _ _ __

''
•

61-tlerm I'IVII!ment
61-WantMtolll't

with river frontage . After 6

992·72114.

3ROLL

4.99

And Up

Housing
Addition, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Gas heat, central air con· ' Headquarters

The Meigs county Health
Department Is now ac·
ceptlng applications for a,
Qualified Dietician. Salary
commensurate with
qualifications. Benefits in·
elude a five (5) day work
week, all weekends off. a II
paid Holidays, pleasant
working condl1lons with a
chance 10 meet &amp; help the
public.
Qualified, In·
tere~ted
persons should
contllct Mr. Frank Petrie,
Jr:, Deputy Health Com·
m Issloner at tile
County Health
at the
Health Center,
HeiGh,., Pomeroy,
Phone 992-6~25.

KITCHEN
CARPEl

~.95

(ops:

,_
'I

SeniOr

and
Installation

Nice four room house for
rent with garage. 992·2502

·THE TIME has come for
believers in Jesus Chris! to
unite In preparation fqr His
return. Join us In preparmg
the body of Christ for that
• day. Wrl1e: Millennium
1 1'/dnfstrles,
Box . 353,
·1 Newark ~hlo 43055.

.._s,.cetorRent

for

Beautiful three bedroom

New Haven, W.Va.

41-•qulpm ..t tor Rem

22.
- -_
-....._
--_
- :_
:23. _
_
_

728 N: 2nd Ave. ·
Middleport, Ohio

,. neck, blouses, long sleeves.
1:· short sleeves, maternity
1 jeans, slacks. dresses,.
1·' lingerie
and mo're at the
Watermelon Patch, 5th St.,

U-FReoms

._,..lc

21 · ----~--

Twin City Gateway

Factory · choke

flannel,

stack

HOUSE, 7 rooms, on b'ath,
full basement, large lot

Bashan.

Velour,

1

1

Ci1izens. 843·4951 .

With -.
Padding ·

992·2571.

gunsonly.

wlll

RUTlAND FURNITURE CARPET SHOP
NOVEMBER CARPET SALE

on 2 acres of land In good
location. $29,000,- 667·6455
a11er 5.

Racine Volunteer Fire
Department, at building in

I· ·MATERNITY

·c7-Wanted hlltet~t

11-Hemll ,_Sa .. :
12--McMM.........

•CASHIERS
•STOCK BOYS
•MEAT CUTTERS
•MEAT DEPT. MGR.
•PRODUCE
DEPT.
.MGR.
Top Pay- All Benefits
Apply In Person
Monday, November 17th
9:00 a.m.lo 5:00p.m .
At lhe Former

1+-A...rtmtnt ~ Rent

7-Yanllse ..
Sale

___

.

,· .~ SHOOTING MATCH at
Corn Hollow In Ru11and.
· every Sunday s1artlng at
Proceeds being
- noon.
· , donated to the Boy Scout
·;,,'troop 249. 12 gauge factory
:. choke gun only!

tor Rent

4-Giv..wey

17. _ _ _ _ __
18. _ _ _ _ _ __

HELP
RETAIL GROCERY

· " coins, rings, jewelry, etc.

::

Cl-Matllle H0111n

5-Heppy Ads
t-LDif aM P'tuncl •

These cash rates
Include discount

highest prices

Con1act Ed Burkett Barber
•:•·shop, Middlepart.

1

I

Now At:
Pomeroy
Landmark

room, eat In kitchen,
garage, large utility room

~&gt; possible for gold and silver

:·
,.

eRENTALS

~AIIf'OUnctmttlb

Announcements

·•· :1 PAY

one _ enclosed,

HOUSE for sale by owner.
2 bedrooms, I bath, living

•. .evening starting at 6:30
'· p.m. Spensored by 1he

CI-HDUin for R..-t ·

3-tn Me"'orlam

Mail This Coupon with RemiHance
Th• DilllY Sentinel
Box 729
.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 -

.. ~~~
,.,
"''

~

'3

Misc. Merchanise
Firewood for sale, Mixed
types of wood. $35.00 per
pick·up load. Delivered,

54

basement, outbuilding. Has
been remodeled. On corner
of Main &amp; Tyree In Racine.
949·2778.

'I.·
''·
·:: GUN SHOOT : Sa1urday

·CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

19.-------,-..;.__
• 20.

u · -....~o_ _ _ _ __

two bedrooms, new carpet.

ches,

I

•FINANCIAL

13, - - - - - . - - -

some grea 9 1 s as a en·

and earn g1oodftmoney splus

2566.

Print

. ..

-Addonsand
remodeling
-Roofing and glltler

117 N.
Middleport, Ohio
PH. 992·6342

992·5914,

House &amp; lot for sale, eight
room &amp; bath, with fireplace
in family room. Two por·

.

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy-, 0., 45769

give price. The Sentinel
reserves the right to

• --------

three bed fooms, new car·

11

PHONE 992-2156

phone number 1f used.
You~ ll get better results --+~4~'4~~~~~
if ybu describe fully,

11 . _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,...._

as a young business person

concrete

monument; thence soutll 11
degrees 43' 29 west continuing along said line. 6.03
feet to the peint o1 begin·
nlngbcontalning 1.001 acre.
Su 1ec1 to' all legal high·
ways and easements of
record.
Deed Reference : Being
part of the real estate
described in Deed BOok
262,~, Page 187, Meigs County uee&lt;fRecords.
Parcel No. 1 was ap·
praised at $3~.!00 .00. Par·
eel No. 2 was appraised at
$37,500 .00 .
'
Terms of sale: Cash
JamesJ. Proffit!
Siler ill of
Meigs County
degrees 43' 29" east along a (II) 10, 17, 24, 31c
line, 100.00 feet to an Iron
'
pin; !hence south 87
degrees 52' 01" east along a 3:__A=nn:::ou=n:=c:::•:::m:.::e::.nt:.::•:....._
line240.00
and passing
an iron
pin For Sale: Artex, 25 percent
at
feet, a total
dlstan·
ce of 4«&gt;.00 feel to an lfon off, tableclothes, pictures,

WANT AD INFORMAnON

name and add~ess or Words

12

dollars, sterl ing, etc., wood

1

Custom

1ackets.
(Free Estimalesl
tine/ route carrier. Phone 1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two PRIVATE rooms, cooking ,'
Ph. 614·949·2358
PomerQy, OHl or call 992· us righ1 away and get on bedrooms, new carpet. 1976 cable TV, $40. per week .
V.C.
YOUNG
II
the eligibility list at 992·
evenings &amp; Weekends
7760
773·5651.
__·________ ' 2156 or 992·2157.
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
992·6215 or "2-7314
10·9·Hc
bedrooms,. all electric. 1971
Oh.
Gold, silver or foreign
Skyline, 12sx 6), two
coins or any gold or silver
bedrooms,
bath &amp; 1!3, new
Insurance
11ems. Antique furniture. 13
carpet . 1970 PMC ,
glass or china, will pay top AUTOMOBILE
.IN . 12 &gt;c 60, two bedrooms, new
dollar. or complete estates. SURANCE
been can - carpet. B x S Sales, Inc.,
No item 1oo large or too celled?
Los! your 2nd x Viand Street, Point
small. Check prices before operator's license? Phone Pleasant, WV Phone 675·
selling. Also do appraising. 992·2143.
4424.
Osby (Ossle) Martin. 992·
6370.
1973 Nashua 12x60 Mobile
18
Wanted to Do
WANTED TO BUY : Have vacancy in my home Home. with all cement
block, underpining, 2 per' 2 TRAILER LOTS for rent .
SILVER ,
GOLD ,
Utility Buildings
elderly person. Room &amp; ches, with bedroom built Call742·3122.
PLATINUM, STERLING· tor
FREEl
board,
laundry
reasonable
.
Sizes
fiom 4x6 to 12x40
on. Very good cond . 992
COINS, RlNGS ,JEWELR·
6 Storm Windows or
6268 or can be seen at 479
Pair Shutters w1th
Y, MISC . ITEMS. AB· 992·6022.
Superior Siding Center.
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
SycamoreS!.. M1dd!eper1.
of com·
SOLUTE " flt~ARKET
(614) -.atal ............ Ohlo -jOb.
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
Rt.1, Box 54
1
· " Na~et~arge fer "ttmlft"
BURKETT
BARBER
Racine, Oh.
SHOP.- MIDDLEPORT,
Ph. 614·841·2591
51
Household Goods
OH I0 992·3476.
6·15-ttc
31
30'
Gibson
electric
con·
1
~=::;:;;=::;:;=::;=::;:::::=~
tinuous cleaning range.
OLD COINS. pocket wa1· 10 ROOM brick, 3 baths, Jl/•
Kenmore dishwasher, both 5&lt;e4c.._...cM=is,c:...
. M=e'-'rc, h,a,ne;is,e_
ches, class rings, wedding acre; 6 rooms, 2 baths, llf•
avocado. Karen Goins at bands, diamonds. Gold or acres; 6 rooms ba:~~·~~; 1
992·7132.
FIREWOOD for sale. $20. Installed
&amp;
silver. Call J . A. Wamsley, bath, 2 mobile
All types Of roof work,
truck load. Delivered. Split
7~2-2331. Treasure Chest
Mason, 3 bedroom
Repaired
new or repair gutters
$25.
992·5050.
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592· lived in, 2 bedroom, rented
53
Anliques
and downspouts, guHer
12
years
ex·
6462.
2 acres. John Sheets, 31h
cleaning
and Hinting ..
perience .
ATTENTION :
(IM· Six foot~ poin1 hi1ch disk.
miles ·south of Middlepert,
All work guaranteed.
~~~PORT
ANT
TO
YOU)
Will
Rt. 1.
985·4210.
WANTED TO BUY: C
cash or certif ied check
rings, weddjng ·bands,
Free Estimates
antiques and collec·
anything stamped lOk, 14k, Trailer lot for sale, ss.ooo.
Reasonable Prices
Antiques, lamps, picture
ll-tthl1.s
or
en1ire
estates.
18k, gold. Silver coins, Modular home lot on Route
Phone
Call Howard
"Your Needs
Nothing too large. Also, frames, metal shelving,
POCket watches. Call Joe 7, three bedroom farm ·
Are
My
Business"
949·2162
oak
din
ing
table.
992·3403.
1·( 614) ·992·3325
guns, pocket watches and
Clark, 992·2054, Clark's house located on Route 7.
Ph. 446·4741
949·2160
coin
collections.
Call
614·
JewelrY., Pomeroy, Ohio.
992·2571 .
767·3167 or 557·3411.

I pin in the existing westerly scarfs, kits, mise, · &amp;
rlght·of·way line of State jewelry .
985· 3949 .
II Route No. T; thence soutn 9 Rosemary Keller.

Print one word In each
space below. "Each in·
itial or group of figures
counts as a word. Count

2. - - - - - - - - . : .

1973 &lt;;rown Haven, 14 x 65,

etc. Complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,

No. 7, 94.00 feet to , an

e&gt;e. isting

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

1.---------

IRON AND BRASS BE OS,
old furniture, desks, gold
rings, )ewelry, silver GET VALUABLE training
ice boxes,)ars antiques,

the existing westerly right-

l~rcl Of Thllfllll

l For Rent

"Will you take cash or a check?"

• CARPENTtR
SERVICES''

~~~~=~H~e~l~p~W~a;,n~t;ed~=lr;i~~~iiifi~~~=~1
Furnished apartments, 992·
for Sale
3129,
or 1-304-882·

of-way line of State Ro.ute

feet, more or fess, to a point

' Nama---------Add ran'-------~---

)' Announcement

Apartment
for Rent
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
Is. Phone 992·5434.

AAA Aluminum

Public Notice

Write your own ad 'and order by mall with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you gel
results. Money not refundable
•

l Wanted ·
l For Sale

44

11-17

FREE ESTI.MATES

Public Notice

1I Curb Inflation.
ll
Pay Cash for
iI Classlfleds and.
I
Savelll
I

classify. edit or reject
any ad. Your ad will be
put In the proper
claslficatlon If you'll
check the proper box
below

10·24·1 mo.

10-7-tfc

r

Public Nollce

r----------------------

NovemMr U , 1980
MONDAY
There is a poss1bllity that you wilJ take on new
MIDDLEPORT Business and responsibilities and duties where your work or
Professional Women's Club, 7:30 career i&amp; concerned this co~ year. Each bur·
den, however, collld add additional dollars to
p.m. Monday evening in Colwnbia your paycheck.
SCORPIO fOcL !A-Nov. ZZ' You're llkelf to be
Gas Co. office, Middleport. Guest
very lnduruious today, and th.il!l i&amp; admirable,·
speaker will be Lucy Earwood, but you could also attempt to do so many thing!
district director. Mrs. Phyllis none will be firuabed properly. Romance, travel,
luck, resources, p~Wible pitfall.s and career for
·Flowers, regional legislation chair- lhe coming months are all discussed in your
AstrQ-Graph which begins with your birthday.
man, will ~o be a guest.
Mail S1 for each to Astro-Graph, Bm: i89 Radio
MEN'S FELLOWSIDP, Meigs City Station, N. Y. 10019. Be sure to speeifY birth
County Churches of Christ meeting date.
SAGmARruS (Nov. U.Dec. Zll nlisis oneof
7:30 p.m. Monday at Dexter Church those days when, for some strange reason, you
may find )our.~elf uut of step with the majority.
of Christ.
II this hllppens, get bact in the ranks .
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, Royal
CAPRICORN {Dec. 12-Jm;a. lB) Strive to keep
and Select Masters Monday 7:30 ootside pressures from entel"ill@ your home
today. II YQUlet them get the better cA you, you I
p.m. will confer the royal master may end up dbturbing the whole family.
I
AQUARIUS IJaa. !11-Fob. 19) Your memory 1
and select master degrees.
could bo a trille faulty today, so doo't rely too
TtJFSDAY
heavily on it. Make notes or list, of things you I
I
GROUP 2 of the Middleport First havetodo.
PISCES IFob. 11-Man:b 10) Thia,. n&lt;&gt;t. gilod I
United Presbyterian Churcl! will daY. to ll8Swne new financial obligations tf you
old detts which need to be taken care of fir- I
meet at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday for a din- have
st. KeepyourcreditA·l.
1
ner at the Down Ull!ler Restaurant
ARID! 1r.oar.• Zl-ApriiiJ) Take what others
promise you today with a grain of salt. Their in- I
in Gallipolis. After the dinner they tentlons
will be good, but they mar not be able to 1
will return to the home of Mrs. deliver all that they pledge.
I
TAURUS IAprfl 11-May Zll) Unfortunately, you
Mildred Karr for a meeting. ·
may start out dOing thtng.s wrong today and I
SAUSBURY PTO Tuesday at n111ke difficult tasks even harrler. Plan that 1
which
Salisbury Elementary. Book Fair care
. you wish to accomplish with exceeding I
under direction of Katen Walker
GEMINI (May ZI·Jue ZOI Enjoy yourseU I
today, but mind your p's and q's socially. Should 1
from 7 to 7:30 p.m. Books may be )'OU
overindulfi!:e or behllve poorly, it will hurt
purchased and refreshments will be your i.mageandreputaUon.
I
CANCER (Juae ZI.Jaly ZZ) In compeUUve. 1
awarded.
situations today your adversary may be a bit 1 I
AUXIUARY of the Pomeroy more fonnldable than roullilnk. Don't mille the
I
Eagles Club, Area 2171, 111ill have mlalllleolun&lt;lereatimatlnjjhimorher.
LEO IJlliy 11-Aq. It!) It's po!lllible you'Dfee/. 1
nomination for vice pesident, at a your Ideas are better thin thole of your peer~ '
and porhapiilhey are. YIIU mUIIIIIJl to. 1 I
meeting to be held at 8 p.m. today,
verycanfldhow you.,.....nt them.
1
Tuesday.
VIRGO (Aq. ll-8epl. ZZ) .. - ,... ...... I
&amp;oclay wlli!rt jotal na&amp;ua 1ft c..::eraed, er 1
BROWNIES MEET
llu.p moyreta blt•tal.......,ucl leoveyao I
Pinecone turkeys were made as a
hoWJJoi ~~~e '"""NonnoUyyou'iefond , I1
special holiday craft at the Tuesday ci LIIIRAII!ep&lt;.~I.ZI)
sltuatlona "httte partners are involved, but
night meeting of the Brownie Troop
today you could fiore better operatinoJ i.,. 1 I
dependently than as a team player.
1220 held at the Salisbury Elementary School.
I
Plans for the investiture to be held
I
I
on Nov. 25 at the Enterprise United
I
Methodist Church were made. The
PESSIMISTIC PERSON
meeting opened with Amy Rouse
A pessiml$ Ia a person who lookl I
leading tbe pledge to the flag, and on the biight sldll of things, hoping to I
I
Amy Warth, the promise,
see tarnish set in.

ClUb hoSts Pafty
.£
45 persons
10r
.

ASTRO
GRAPH

992·5682

11-16·1 mo.

oil tank. Rain or shine.

.-o

in 1he grantors property
corner: thence south 5
degrees 52' 51" west along
the grantors propert~ line,
59.85 feet to a pelnt In lhe
grantors south property
nne; tnence north 87
degrees 52' 01" wes1 along
described real estate, the grantors south property
situate in Section 4, Town- line, 89.18 feet to an Iron pin
sh ip 4, Rarige 12, Orange in the existing wes1erly
Township, Meigs County,, right·of·way
line of state
Ohio, in the Village of Tup· · Route No. 1 and the real
o'clock A.M., the following pers
Plains:
paint of beginning for the
fands and tenements, toCommencing at a point In land herein described;
wit :
.
the
north~ast
corner
of
said
thence north 87 degrees 5~'
PARCEL NO.1 :
S; thence south 01"
wesl continuing along
Being Lot · No. 9 of Section
along
the
east
line
of
said
H ickory Acres SUDd1vision, Section 5, Orange Town- said line and passing an
iron pin at 199.79 feet a total
10 Sect1on 5, Town .t, North,
ship and the west line of distance of 439.79 fee11o an
Range 12 West, Ohio Com· Section
Olive Township, iron pin; thence north 9
pany ' s
Purchase.
as 2.459 feet,34,more
or less, to a

I
I

•New Homes • ex·
tenslve remodeling
•Electrical work
•Roofln1 work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7 583

Hrs.: Man.·Fri.
9 A.M.·S: 30 P.M.

Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime

miles off

OONSTRUCTION

- Auto and Truck
Repair
- Transm1ssion
Repair

12 Park St.

l

women's sizes 9· 16, books,
toy~. glassware, jeans, fuel

Small investment, large
•
returns., Sentinel Want Ads

Four receive Order
of the Rose 'degree

112

:

ROUSH

Route 7 on Forest Run
Road. Baby clothes, lots of
girls clothes sizes 8·12,

r---.,.------------------------------------

Little miss
turns two years

PWMBING
AND HEATING

Houses for Rent

ments. Call afte r 6

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

very

pretty,

water &amp;

AKC Registered Cocker
Spaniel puppy. Blonde,
female. 843·2684.

1979 Mercury · Capri,
$5,000.00. Lots of ; extras,
good gas mileage. m -2803.

gas lines. Ex·
&amp; transit

cavating worl&lt;
layout. 992·7201 .

.·&gt;
DOZER work. Small )obs a
specialty. Dependable ser·
1979
DIESEL
RABBIT.
Un·.
AKC Registered Pekenese der 10,000 mile,, excellent vice. 742·2753.
puppy. Male. 843·2684.
condition, $7,000. cetll -614·
378·6226.
Electrical
AKC registered toy poodle
&amp; Refrlgeration
4954
puppies. Beginning week ot: 1972 Plymouth Satellite
Thanksgiving. 992·29~7 af· Sebring. Power steering, SEWING MACHINE
:.....~~~n SIZES 8-20
service, . all
ter Sp.m .
air conditioning, good con· Repairs,
makes1
992·2284.
The
dition. S600.oo. Also six. Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
61
week
old
beagle
puppies.
Musical
57
Aothorlzed Singer Sales
247·2192.
'.,
Instruments
and service. we sharpe.!!.
Elastic n1ps the wa1st ol a Eight piece Ludwig drum
Scissors.
totally sofl and simple shirtdress. kit. Zlld)lan cymbals, l.p. 1974 Oldsmobile · ~. ali i
' ll's the most rehesh.ng winteo accessories. all cases. Bes1 power. Also pickup·101)per.· EL,WOOD . BOWERS
choice you could make and a offer. 1·304·675·1513 after $150.00. 949·2368. •·.
RiePAIR Sweepers,
wondertul way to welcome 1981. five. Weekdays &amp; all day
toasters. Irons, a II small
Prinled Pattern 4954: M1sses
appliances. Lawn mower.
s1zes 8. 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Saturday.
Next to State Highway
Size 12 (busl 34) lakes 2 718
74
Molorcycles
Garage on Route 7, 985·
yards 60-1nch fabiiC.
3825.
1978 KAWASAKI KZ
$1.75 1tr .U piltlnl. Md 50e
motorcycle, color blue.
APPLIANCE SERVICE:
ltr . . /11111111 ltr tinl d•
Cal/949·26.49.
all
makes washer, dryers,
61
Farm
Equipment
11111111 - ..... Sln4 II:
ranges, dishwashers,
disposals, wa1er tanks. Call
Snow plow, heai!Y duty • to.~ 75
MO:::::~le
Ken Young at 985·3561
Wheel~orse tractor: VerJI ---==="'-''-""'-4!t1
Pllllnio.,l
good condition. $40,00 985·( BasS boat, Quachfta, blue &amp; before 9 a.m. or after 6
~.
: white, boat motor with p.m.
Dajlfllellllnet
trailer. $4,000.00. 992·2016.
u
G-r•l Haullnt
24l
...Prill
17 ~'~
'"" Nl
11011.
AGR'I·LIME .Spreading,
DP,SIZE,_,
Mill
llm61oM arid fill dirt
hauling. Leo Morris, 742·
Why put up •ilh hi(li prices2455
.
save doiii/S, PI better quality!
11
Homo
S.nd fw our NEW FAU.-WINT£R
_ __!!I~~!!!!!L_.I 87
UpiiOistery ·
. PATIERN CATALOG. 94 patterns,
Experienced carpenters,
.,
frH Pattern Cotpon (worth
$1.75). C.talor. $1.00.
63~;;.:;;-:~L~I..:.vo~s~to~c~k~:;.;;;j aluminum, vinyl siding, In· · FURNITURE R,.PAIR.
stalling,
capfnets,. Upholstery work &amp;
uu llu Hillt Clllllll$1.75 90 week old pigs
car· ! refinishing. Contact Jim
1 paneling, gener.al
UtSo k »h JI.M ~$1.75
castrated, Iron and vltam,ln 1 penter work. Pl1one 1.304. Bentz, &lt;lth 51., Syracuse,
12f4olcl!Ealr T...... $1.75
shots. $24. each. 985·4104.
882·2090or 1·304-773,5671.
Oh.
127-Afaloan 'n' Dillies . . . $1.75

-/h.,.. -/1.1-s

........

.'
)

.

..

�1&lt;hThe Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Nov. 17, 1980

Area Deaths

l Break-in

Fred S. Blaettnar
Fred S. Blaettnar, 71, widely
known Pomeroy busineMman, died
Sunday at Holzer Medical Center.
·Mr. Blaettnar, who resided at 209
Spring Ave., Pomeroy, was born in
Pomeroy, a son of the late Lelia B.
Sauer Blaettnar and John F. Blaettnar. The family for four generations
operated the Blaettnar Auto Co.
whose motto was "From Buggies to
Buicks". Mr. Blaettnar was the
third generation of the family to
operate the Pomeroy business which
is now Smith-Nelson Motors Inc.
Mr.Blaettnar following the sale of
·1 the . automobile business remained
active in the business conununity
and had only recently retired.
Mr. Blaettnar was extremely interested in the history of Meigs
County and as a hobby collected a
wide range of photographs and accounts dealing with local events over
the years.
Mr. Blaettnar was a long-time active member of the Trinity Church in
Pomeroy. He belonged to Pomeroy
Lodge 164, Free and Accepted
Masons ; Pomeroy Chapter 80, Royal
Arch Masons; Pomeroy Council 46;
Ohio Valley Commandery 24,
Knights Templar; the Knights of the
York Cross of Honor ; Aladdin
Shrine, Columbus and Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of Eastern Star.
A graduate of Ohio University,
Mr. Blaettnar was a member of
Lambda Fraternity and was a charter member of Kappa Kappa Psi.
Surviving are his wife, Margaret;
a son, John William Blaettnar,
Pomeroy; a daughter, Mrs. James
R. (Nancy) Lee, Upper Arlington;

FRED S. BLAETI'NAR

six grandchildren who include Mrs.
David {Elizabeth) Golowenski,
Lorain ; Mrs. David (Chip) Haggerty, Athens, formerly Mary Blaettnar ; Cathy and Frederick Blaettnar,
Pomeroy, both attending Ohio
University; Wendy and Tracy Lee,
Upper Arlington.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Wednesday at Trinity Church
with the Rev. W. H. Perrin and tbe
Rev. William Middleswarth of.
ficiating. Burial will be in Beech
Grove Cemetery. Friends may call
at the Ewing Funeral Home from 7
to 9 this evening and,! rom 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 p.m. Tuesday. Masonic rites
will be conducted at the funeral
home at 8 p.m. Tuesday.

Meigs County happenings ••
WILL HOLD REVIVAL
A revival wijl be held at the Long
Bottom United MethOdist Church
beginning this evening and running
through Nov. 23 with the Rev.
Robert Sanders as speaker. Special
music will be provided for the services which start at 7:30 each
evening. The public is invited.
SPEClAL MEETING
A special meeting of Middleport
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, will be held at 7
p.m. Tuesday with work in the
Master Mason Degree.
ASK TOWED

Richard Eugene Kleinert, Sr., 45,
Rutland, and Betty Ann Romine
Wise, 39, Rutland.
COURT ACJ'ION SOUGHT
Lena Adk ins, Middleport ,
charging gross neglect of duty and
extreme cruelty, haS filed suit for
divorce against Roger Lewis
Adkins, Theodore, Ala., in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
In the same court, Stanford J.

-

Moon, Pomeroy, has filed suit for
$2600 against the Erie Insurance
Group, alleging the money to be due
for damages to his automobile in a
Sept. 12 accident.
TIJESDAY BAZAAR
The Long ·Bottom Col1llllunity
Assn. will sponsor a bake salebazaar tomorrow (Tuesday ) beginning at 9:30 a.m. at the conununlty
building. Breads, candies, pies,
cakes, and handmade items will be
offered for sale. There will also be a
rummage sale conducted in conjunction with the project.
END MARRIAGES
In the common pleas court, three
divorces, all on grounds of gross
neglect and extreme cruelty, have
been granted. They include Gwen D.
Husk, Hemlock Grove, from James
E. Husk ; Floyd A. Reyoolds, Middleport, from Kay Reynolds, Marietta, and George E. Stitt, Pomeroy,
from Lynn Radar Stitt; Upper Sandusky .

Board members square off

nets cash

FireworkS fly at November board meeting

Meigs County sheriff's deputies
are investigating a breaking and entering of Deem's -Restaurant in
Racine.
According to the report, Mrs. Edna Deem said sometime between
9:30 p.m. Friday and 1 a.m. Saturday morning someone. removed a
window pane from a rear door and
entered the establishment. Approximaately $100 was taken,
Saturday evening the sheriff's
department received two deer ac- ·
cident reports. At 8:15 p.m. on
State Route 325, Lester Ward, Route ·
1, Vinton, struck and killed a deer
that ran into the · path of his car.
There were minor damages to tbe
vehicle.
At 10:30 p.m., Gregory C. Sheets,
21, Hemlock Grove, on Route 33,
struck and killed a deer which ran
into the path of his vehicle. There
were moderate damages to tbe
Sheets car.

NEW AWNING...:. The Elberfeld Department store
on E. Main Street in Pomeroy, is in tbe process of

Revival underway
The Rev. Bill Newman, new
pastor of the Pomeroy First
Southern Baptist Church,. is condueling revival services at the church at 7:30 p.m. each evening this
week.
Special music will be featured
each evening and there will be
special emphasis each evening ineluding Monday night, "come as you
are night"; Tuesday, senior citizens
night; Wednesday, family night;
Thursday, youth night, and Friday,
"pack a pew" night. On Saturday
evening there will be a candlelight
service.
.On Sunday morning "miracle Sunday" will be observed with a goal set
to surpass record attendance of 101
at the morning worship service. On
Sunday evening the church will be
having at harvest dinner at the
Kyger Creek Club.
The church is located at 282
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy; The
public is invited. to all of the services.

receiving a large, new awning. Pictured working on
tile awning are Don Moore and Herbert Dixon.

By Bob Hoeflich
A heated diScussion which led to
near fisticuffs between two board
members caused president Carol
Pierce to quicly adjourn Monday's
regular monthly meeting of tbe '
Meigs Local School Board.
As board members, Robert
Snowden and Dr. Keith Riggs,
squared off threatening bodily bann
to each other, two other members,
Pierce arid Larry Powell blocked
any contact.
The near altercation came about
a(ter Supt. David L. Gleason had
presented a plan through which the
di!trict can receive , he said, $1
million in June.
Supt. Gleason reported the Meigs
Local District is paying two and onehalf mills over what it required by
tbe state in bond retirement. He said
tbe district has four mills bond

.

'

retirement in effect and only one and plan, said the exact millage did mt hurriedly announced the meeting
one-half mills is required to retire matter at this point as the board was was adjourned.
tbebonds.
only to take initial steps last night.
EARUERPROB.LEMS
. Through a special arrangement Snowden said it did matter because
Prior to the near fight, the
with tbe State Department of he would not want voters to be asked meeting had not run smoothly.
Education and approval of a bond to approve a bond issue and find that
Several times, Dr. Riggs had adissue by the voters the district could there would be a tax increase.
dressed the 75 people attending
retain the two and · one-half mills
At this point, bickering began bet- about their lack of support of a tax
overpayment, Gleason said. The ap- ween Snowden and Dr. Keith Riggs, levy In November, the lack of parenprova~ of the bond issue would not • another board member.
ts cooperating in getting their sons
cost the taxpayers of the district any
Dr.Riggs contended that Snowden transported to and from freshman
additional monies, Gleason. repor- was saying the district dQes not need · football practice, ab(Jut telephOI!f
ted.
tbe money. Snowden contended be calls he received while he was atBoard Member Robert Snowden was not saying that, but thought the tempting to watch a football game
took exception to the statement by situation on the millage should be on tele.vision Sunday and other matSupt. Gleason that the amount that clarified. One word led to another ters. At one time, Snowden also adcould be kept in the district is two before. both men were on their feet . monished the crowd on the noise that
and one-half mills. Snowden saiil he moving towa$ each other while was in the meeting roOm.
had been advised that the millage making threats of liodi!y harm.
On the first matter of business, the
which could be · retained would be
Dr. ~ggs removed his eyeglasses. board altered the reconunendation
one and one-balf mills.
Board members Pierce and Powell of Supt. Gleason at a 4-1 vote on tbe
Gleason; who had asked for initial beld positions between the two · appointment of a DPPF aides at the
steps to be taken for instigating the arguing members. Pierce then Pomeroy and Middleport Elemen-

Traffic accidents take 14 lives
By The Associated Prefls.
Two multiple-fatality accidents
bOOSted Ohio's weekend traffic
death toll to 14, the Highway Patrol
said. The toll alsO included three
pedestrians.
The patrol counts traffic fatalities
from 6 p.m. Frlday to midnight Sun' day.
The dead:
SUNDAY
HAMILTON - Robert Gates, 17, of
Hamilton, when struck by a car on

Emergency squad runs
Four runs were reported by the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service over the weekend.
On Saturday at 4:13p.m., Harold
Darnell was taken from Route 143 to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by tbe
Pomeroy Unit. On Sunday, the
Syracuse Unit at 12:25 a.m. took
Freda Russell from her borne to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Syracuse at 1:15 a.m. took Fannie
Lewis from her residence to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; at 3: 47
a.m., the Pomeroy Unit t®k Jerry
Johnson from Township Road 79 to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

•

at y

FRIDAY NIGHT
sons, 22, Pepper Pike, in a one-car
XENIA - Billy Tussey, 22, of
accident on Ohio 64 in Wood County.
DELAWARE - Russell R. Childs, Chillicothe, in a two-car accident on
33, Columbus, in a two-car crasb on U.S. 35 in Greene County.
WOOSTER - Hal)ard Meade, 41,
U.S. 23 north of Delaware.
WALBRIDGE- Pauline Masnyk, of Rittman, in a one-car accident on
113, Perrysburg, struck by a vehicle a county road in Wayne County.
CINCINNATI - Dani~l L.
while crossing Ohio 65·in Wood CounLuegering;
16; John Fisher, 16; Matty.
thew
F.
Bering,
61 ; · Maria. A.
AKRON - Robert E. Philllps, 47,
Bellman,
63,
ail
of
Delhi
Township,
of Akron, a pedestrian struck by a
· near Cincinnati, in a tw~H:ar aC'
hit-skip driver in Akron.
cident in Hamilton County.

Ward, bus driver. Betty · Milhoan
was added to the substitute teachers
list.
HEADS DELEGATJON
Tom Gannaway was spokesman
for a group of parents who appeared
before the board on school bus
safety.
As a result of the delegation's concern, it was decided to inspect all
school buses of the district beginning
this morning starting with the bilses
which have the most mileage.
Gannaway said he.inspected a bus
on which his daughter rides and
found it unsafe. He made several
contacts on the matter including
with ,the State Highway Patrol.
Following an inspection with the
patrol involved the bus was· pulled
from service-not as soon as it should
have been, Gannaway stated. The
(Continued on page 14 )

•

enttne

SPECIAL

By Associated Preas
At least four people were killed in
traffic accidents as the season's first
snowstorm in Ohio dwnped up to
several inches of snow across virtually the entire state - much to
· forecasters' surprise.
The snow, which still was falling in
many areas late .Monday, was expected to end today and move to the
Northeast, according.to the National
Weather Service in Cleveland. The
heavy snowfall, attributed to a low
center in Alabama, caught many·
forecasters .off guard.
"The snow wasn't foreSeen a few
days ago or even Sunday morning,"
..,.,?'"' &lt;~~~: ~ . ,.,. ""' · said Jim Thompson, Qlle_ol tbe ser-

RAY-0-VAC LANTERNS
•

vice's inetenllogiltl. uThere were

'Ofi-

no clean-cut indications before Monday morning. "
The weather service regarded
, ,.,.. central Ohio as the hardest hit area
in the state - with between four to
seven inches recorded as of Monday
night and a bit more expected by
today. But unofficial measurements
of 71,2 inches were reported near
Middletown in southwestern Ohio.
"In my time, I've never seen a
snow like this so early in the

Special
Complete with 6-~olt battery

HOUSEWARES DEPT. -1ST 'F LOOR

ELBERFELDS ·IN POMEROY

FIFTEEN CENTS .

F o.ur people die in
season's first storm

•

ELBERFELD$

POMEROY - The Pomeroy and
Middleport Lions held its regular
meetingNov.l:!atMeigsinn.
·Items of business included · a
discli!ISion &lt;i membership and
future membership growth and the
active members in the organization.
The discussion was a "self·
criticism" type approach and held
tbe interest of the group in attendance. The membership felt the
discussion should continue at the
Nov. 26meeting.
How to complete the "Light Bulb
Sales for Children's Glasses''
project was also set as an agenda
item for Nov. 26 along with how to
add strength and vigor to the Lions'.
work.
A get-well card was signed for
Clarence Struble at the close of the
meeting.

tary Schools.
Gleason had recommended hiring
Martha King for the position.
However, Snowden asked why Mary
Lou Hawkins, already employed in
the district, was not given the post.
Gleason under questioning said Mril.
Hawkins, in his opinion, was
unqualified. Snowden pressed for
answers on how she was not ·
qualified. Snowden then moved that
Mrs. Hawkins be named to the aide
position: Sbe was hired at a 4-1 vote
with Powell casting tbe dissenting
vote. The board hired Eva Howard
for a DDPF aide post at the Salem
Center and Harrisonville Schools.
Named as substitutes in the
district were Carolyn Satterfield,
aide, secretary; Robin Satterfield,
custodian, aide, secretary; Paige
Smith, aide, secretary; Vera
Holliday, aide, secretary; Alice

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1980

VOL. XXI NO. 153

U.S.127 in Butler County.
r-p;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
ST. CLAIRSVIIJ..E- Jeffrey An·
derson, 18, of Bellaire, in a three-car
accident on I-70 in Belmont CoWJty.
PORT CUNTON - Raymond A.
Throne, 48, of Oak Harbor, and Kirk
Almroth, 16, of Walbridge, in a twocar smashup on Ohio 19 in Ottawa
County.
SA'11JRDAY
BOWUNG GREEN - Alec Par-

'Self-criticism'
given by Lions

~

season," said C.T. Morningstar, the
official observer for the National
Weather Service in Middletown.
Heavy snows in that area resulted
in traffic accidents involving two
deaths.
. Christopher McAtee; 18, of West
Chester was killed Monday when his
car skidded into another auto near
Mason, police said. And 20 miles to
the north, Martha Utley, 19, of West
Manchester, was killed in a threecar accident on Interstate 70 near
Eaton.
Meanwhile, further north, Sam J .
Mitchell, 28, of Ann Arbor, Mich. ,
. was killed Monday night when his
car slid into a ·tractor trailer on an
lee-covered bridge near Flndlay,
said the Ohio Highway Patrol. And
in the northeast, Clean Kelly, 54, of
Lisbon, died Monday after a tractor
trailer ploughed into a car ani! then
into his van on U.S. 62 near Alliance,
troopers said.
Three inches ·of snow were reported at Dayton Airport, with an additional three to six inches expected
before ending overnight. Little accumulation was reported in downtown Cincinnati late Monday afternoon, where rain was just star-

ting to change to snow. A few inches
of accwnulation were predicted in
the city before today.
Further south, east of Cincinnati,
precipitation had changed to a mixture of rain and sleet or snow Monday .
To the north, along Lake Erie near
Sandusky' just a thin dusting was
reported Monday afternoon. But
elsewhere along the l~e. including
Cleveland, a few inches of snow was
recorded, with a few more expected
by early today.
· No snow was reported in Ohio's extreme norihwest cprner, the only
part of the state without snow as ri '
Monday night, the weather service
sal d.
The state's roads still were slick
late Monday, even !hough most
major thoroughfares bad been
cleared by the evening's rush hour,
said Brian Landis, dispatcher for the
Ohio Highway Patrol in Colwnbus.
"There's been quite a few fenderbenders here and there," he said,
"but nothing really more than that.
"Myself, I didn't think there wai; a
whole lot snow - it could have been
a lot worse.''

· · Access road ciinstruction
ODOT seeks ·co'-'ld blaze housing trail

SNOW SCRIPTS - Julie Vale of Colwnbus, a 21- 'parking lots. Up to several inches of snow fell in Ohio
year-old business major at Ohio State University, prin- on Monday, covering aU but the state's extreme norts in the season's first snow at one of tbe school's thwestcorner. (APLaserphoto),

emergency
assl•StanCe
·ley highways cause

. . .

.

CINCINNATI - Icy roads are being blamed for two Cincmnati ·
pileups involving a total of 34 cars this morning.
Tile biggest was at the Norwood lateral, where police saJd 23 cars
were involyed in a pileup. There were no injuries.
Norwood police say tbe bridge, which connects I·7l and 1-?5, apparently Iced up between the time they patrolled it at5:30 a.m. and tbe
time tbe chain-reaction accident occurred at 6 a.m.
About 10 miles north of that accident, Cincinnati police say 11 cars
slammed into each otber at the Reading-Gilbert exit at the junction of
I·75 and 1-275.

Jury acquits Klansmen

The I98I's ·a re here.
hospital here for tretment. He was identified as James
Black, 38, of liillllborough, Calif. Three people were
killed and at least seven injured Sunday. (AP LaserphOto).

INJURED HIKER- Aman injured in a rock slide
between the upper and lower Yosemite Falls at
Yosemite National Park is listed from a Lemoore
Naval Air Station helocopter after being airlifted to a
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions-John VanMeter, Rutland; Malinda First, Portland; Melva Canary, Grove City.
Saturday Discharges- Lucille
Lewis, Carl Nichols, Connie Goot·
night, Olga Lewis, Nonna Goodwin.
Sunday Admissions--Freda
Russell, Pomeroy; Fannie Lewis,
Pomeroy; Bertha Griffin, Middleport; Bobbie Adams, Sr., Racine:
Virginia Hayman, Racine; Martha
Fry, Pomeroy; Edith Searls,
Rutland; Robert Freed, Middleport;
Neva Grimm, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges--Charles
Jones, Bessie Sellers, James
Yeauger.

~------~------~------------~

The Farmers Bank
•
IS making· ·
·new car loans.

Ban·k

Pom~roy, Oh,.·

f

'

GREENSBORO, N.C. - An all-white jury on Monday acqwtted.four
Ku Klux Klansmen and two Nuls of ·murder and rioting charges tied
to a bloody "Death to tbe Klan" rally at which five Conununist
Workers Party supporters were shot and killed a year ago.
.
'
The defendants sat expressionless as tbe jury of six' men and Sill
women returned tbe verdicts at 5:12 p.m., following seven days of
ctellberatioil. They wept With frlenda and relatives after court was adjourned.

.•

Fs. Farmers·

Member FDIC

.

Ohioan on transition team
DAYTON, Ohio- A Bet ol ~month-old Siamese twins, sepaPated

"

la8t week, remained In critical but stable condition late Monday.

Valerie and Natalie Waelder, daughters ol a Piqua couple, were
aeparated Friday at Chlldrena Medical Genter. Tile operation had
been moved ujl after It wu dlacovered that Valerie suffered brain
death.
The twim had been joined at the base of the spine since their
·
·
premature birth on June 17.

Ji'eather forecast

•\

Pa11lal clearing tonight. Lows m tbe upper :/Ais. Mostly SWill)' Wedne.lly. Highs In ~ mid-408. Chance ol precipitation near zero percent tonight and Wednesday. Wlndadimlnillhlngto~10mph toolght.
Bd WOidoForecut- ThuradayttuvughSaturday:Ac;l!anceof
ra111 ar- Thunday and moetly fair Friday and Saturday. Highs in
tile mid and upper fo011bunday and Fnday and In the 50s Saturday.
Lowll hun tbe mld-21111 to tbe mid-308.

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Ohio Department of Transportation
has asked legislative leaders far
emergency action to bOOSt the number of snow removal crews on the
state'6 highways this winter.
The request came as the
beleaguered agency was confronted
by the fil'st snowstorm of the season.
ODOT Director David L. Weir has
sent letters to leaders of both parties
in tbe House and Senate calling for
prompt action that will allow constructlon workers to aid in snow
removal operations.
About 450 fewer road crew
workers are available statewide this
year following rulings by tbe state
Personnel Board of Review on job
(Continued on page 14)

Construction of a planned access
road from Union Avenue in Pomeroy
to the new multi-purpose building on
Mulberry Heights will open an area
of more than 100 acres for new
housing.
This was the report of Meigs Coon,
ty Commissioner Richard Jones
Monday night presented during
Monday's regular meeting of
Pomeroy Village Council.
Jones said commissioners bave
passed a resolution asswning no
responsibility for the construction of
the access road. However, cominissioners will repair, maintain and
provide for snow removal from tbe
new roaq. There will be no cost to the
'village in the construction. or in
mailitaining the new road which will
open up about 109 acres which would
be suitable for new housing.
The access road will be three lanes
in width and will exit near Union
T~IT1lce. There will be a three foot

addition to a part of Union Ave., as a
result of the project.
Council accepted the resolution
and authorized Mayor Clarence Andrews to sign any necessary papers.
The ·report of Mayor Andrews for
the month of October, showing
receipts of $1954.:15 in fines and fees
was approved. It was agreed to purchase new tires for the police cruiser
from the Meigs Tire Center.

Harry Evans, village financial
consuliant, discussed investment of
inactive funds.
Franklin Rizer discussed the
establishment of an helicopter landing pad in the area of the stage on
the upper parking lot. Council indicated it is not against the
establishment of the pad, but it wss
suggested that perhaps, more than
(Continued on page 14)

Prhne lending rate hits 16.25 percent
NEW YORK (AP) - Several
major banks today raised their
prtme lending rates by threequarters of a point to 16.25 percent,
the highest that rate has been since
May.
.
Chase Manhattan, tbe 1.ation's
third-largest commercial bank,
initated tbe increaae from a 15.5 percent rate. It had no comment on the
move; but analysts widely predicted
a qew round of prime rate Increases
following credit-tightening moves by
tbe Federal Reserve Board Friday

afternoon.
Cltlbank, tbe llei:Ond-largest bank,
Manufacturers Hanover, No. 4, and
Morgan Guaranty, N~. 5, quickly
followed · Chase's lead with announcementa oi a 16.:15 percent rate
at each of thOse bar.ks.
The Federal Re&gt;erve Friday
rai~ from 11 percent to 12 percent

"

liB discount rate, or that rate it
charges on Its direct loans to banks
and added a 2 percent surcharge for
llOIJle large borrowers. Thole moves
by the Fed, tbe central monetary
agency, are expected to generally
increaae interest rates In money
markets, thua making banks' costs
of acqulrlnil funda more expelllive.
The prime rate applies to. loans
banta malre to their best corporate
customen. Wlt11e It ~·t directly
apply to conswner loans it is widely
fOllowed as an indicator of general·
interest rate trends.
The prime climbed to a peak of ll
percent .Jut April then slid to a low
of 11 percent in late July before
beginning to rlse again.
It last was above 16 percent in
1nid-May when major banks were
charging either 16.:15 or 16.5 percent.

President-elect Ronald Reagan and wife .Nancy take refuge frOm heavy
rains under umbrellas as they arrive at Andre\lll Air Force s.&amp;e, Mel.,
Monday for their first visit to the nation's capital after winning tbe election. They are scheduled to meet with congreasional leaden during their
week-long stay as well as With President carter and First Lady RoillcyJm
at the White House. (AP Laserphoto).

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